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https://archive.org/details/royaljubileeexhiOOroya
I
r
MANCHESTER
COPYRIGHT.
JOHN HEYWOOD,
Official Printer to the Royal Jubh-ef Exhibition,
Manchester.
fXHlBlTlON
Manchester 1687
Plan of
Building Grounds •
\£xH/oiToas \'
Section
Cotton
COKE
/msH Section
COUNTY
CmCKET
CHOU HO
Section 7
Musicflooio
roioOliClN
Section / Industhial Design
Section/ Industrial Design
Section 3
CNctucAi s Collateral Indus '
Sections
Chemical a Collateral Industries
To Old Trofford Sration aMancDesTer.
CHRFI/IC[\
DYNAMOS
DYNAMOS
Section B
Machinery /n Motion.
ENCLOSURE.
tOALS
PuRRlE
Pink
.. LishtGseen .
TrisJi Sectjcm
Mackcnerv. . Yellow.
ChRnitcTtl (tmtCcUccLerc tl h Ldtusbdes . Buff.
P/wto araphic - Orange
.J_fM-w.Ro oni.FlcwETrs.Sculptures,A:. ... Dark Blue .
and Glass Uaus es an dFazry_
Lakes
Fcicnlams .
\LigntBlue
B rown.
ixHIBITIONSTATION
ttenTiAta,
h
BOARD OF TRADE CERTIFICATE.
(Copy.)
R 5677
Sir,
BOARD OF TRADE
(railway department),
London, S.W., 27th November, 1886.
I am directed by the Board of Trade to acknowledge the receipt of your letter of the
26th inst., and in reply, to transmit to you herewith a certificate of this Board under the
provisions of the Patents, Designs, and Trade Marks Act, 1883, in respect of the Royal
Jubilee Exhibition proposed to be held next year at Manchester.
I am at the same time to enclose copy of Sections 39 and 57 of the Patents, &c.. Act,
and to draw attention to the steps that will have to be taken by intending exhibitors who
wish to avail themselves of the protection afforded by those sections of the Act.
I am. Sir,
Your obedient Servant,
(Signed) COURTENAY BOYLE.
SAMUEL LEE BAPTY, Esq.,
Albert Chambers,
Albert Square, Manchester.
(Copy.)
BOARD OF TRADE
R 5677. (railway department),
London, S.\V.
PATENTS, DESIGNS, AND TRADE MARKS ACT, 1883.
Upon the application of Samuel Lee Bapty, Albert Chambers, Albert Square,
Manche.ster, made to the Board of Trade on the 26th day of November, 1886, the Board of
Trade do hereby certify that the Royal Jubilee Exhibition, proj)osed to be held in the year
1887, at Old Traflbrd, Manchester, in the County of Lancaster, is an International
Exliibition.
Signed by order of the Bou’d of Trade, this 27th day of Novernb^ir, 1886.
COURTENAY BOYLE,
Assistant Secretary,
Board of Trade.
PATENTS, DESIGNS, AND TRADE MARKS.
46 and 47 Vic., Cap. 57.]
AN ACT to Amend and Consolidate the Law relating to Patents for Inventions.,
Registration of Designs, and of Trade Marks.
PART II.— PATENTS.
Exhibition at
Industrial or In- 39 exhibition of an invention at an industrial or international
ternational Ex-
prejudice^jxitent exhibition, certified as such by the Board of Trade, or the publication of any
description of the invention during the period of the holding of the exhibition,
or the use of the invention for the purpose of the exhibition in the place where
the exhibition is held, or the use of the invention during the period of the
holding of the exhibition by any person elsewhere without the privity or
consent of the inventor, shall not prejudice the right of the invenb^r or his
legal personal representative to apply for and obtain provisional protection
and a patent in respect of the invention or the validity of any patent granted
on the application, provided that both the following conditions are complied
with, namely : —
(а) The Exhibitor must, before exhibiting the invention, give the
comptroller the prescribed notice of his intention to do so ; and
( б ) The application for a patent must be made before or within six
months from the date of opening of the exhibition.
**************
PART III.— DESIGNS.
57. The exhibition, at an industrial or international exhibition, certified
Industrial OT In- Such by the Board of Trade, or the exhibition elsewhere during the period
ternational Ex-
hibition not to of the holding of the exhibition, without the privity or consent of the
prevent or inva-
l^date Registra- proprietor, of a design, or of any article to which a design is applied, or the
publication, during the holding of any such exhibition, of a description of a
design, shall not prevent the design from being registered or invalidate the
registration thereof, provided that both the following conditions are complied
with, namely : —
(а) The Exhibitor must, before exhibiting the design or article, or
publishing a description of the design, give the comptroller the
prescribed notice of his intention to do so ; and
( б ) The application for registration must be made before or within six
months from the date of the opening of the exhibition.
li
6
Patents^ Designs^ and Trade Maries.
Industrial or
International
Exhibitions.
. RULES
Relating to Applications for Patents for Inventions and Proceeedings
Thereon and Registration of Patents.
17. Any person desirous of exhibiting an invention at an industrial or
international exhibition, or of publishing any description of the invention
during the period of the holding of the exhibition, or of using the invention
for the purpose of the exhibition in the place where the exhibition is held,
shall, after a certificate has been obtained from the Board of Trade that the
exhibition is an industrial or international one, give to the Comptroller seven
days’ notice of his intention to exhibit, publi.sh, or use the invention, as the
case may be.
For the purpose of identifying the invention in the event of an application
for a patent being subsequently made, the applicant shall furnish to the
Comptroller a brief description of his invention, accompanied, if necessary, by
drawings, and such other information as the Comptroller may in each case
require.
Notice of
Exhibition.
Relating to the Registration of Designs.
36. Any person desirous of exhibiting a design, or any article to which a
design has been applied, at any industrial or international exhibition, or of
publishing a description of a de.sign during the period of the holding of the
Exhibition, shall, after a certificate has been obtained from the Board of Trade
that the exhibition is an industrial or international one, give to the Comptroller
seven days’ notice in writing of his intention to exhibit the design or article, or
to publish a description of the design, as the case may be.
For the purpose of identifying the design, in the event of an application to
register the same being subseciuently made, the applicant shall furnish to the
Comptroller a brief description of the nature of the design, accompanied by a
sketch or drawing thereof, and such other information as the Comptroller may
in each case require.
Royal Jubilee Exhibition.
Space.
O bject. 1. — An Exhibition intended to illustrate the progress and development of
Arts and Manufactures during the Victoria era, in celebration of the (Queen’s
Jubilee, will be held in Manchester in 1887.
Title. 2. — The Title will be the “ Royal Jubilee Exhibition, Manchester, 1887.”
Date of Opening. 3.— The Exhibition will be opened early in May, 1887, and will continue
open about six months.
Applications for 4. — Applications for space must be made on the official printed f« rms, which
will be supplied on application to the General Manager, Royal Jubilee Ex-
hibition Offices, Albert Square, Manchester. All particulars must be filled in
and the form returned on or before the 1st November, 1886. The Executive
Committee will make arrangements to siapply belt power, steam, water, gas,
or electricity, at the expense of those Exhibitors who make application for it,
and they will be charged in proportion to the power used. Preference will
be given in all cases where the applicant is the Inventor, Manufacturer, or
Producer of the intended Exhibit.
5. — The general charge for space will be 2/6 per square foot, the minimum
charge being £2 10s., payable on allotment. The ExecuKve Committee reserve
to themselves the power to modify or remit these charges under exceptional
circumstances.
Charge for
Space.
Date for
Receiving
Goods.
Applicants to be
Exhibitors.
Sub-letting
prohibited.
All Exhibits to
be described
in application.
Right reserved
to Refuse or
Remove any
Article.
Empty Cases.
Exhibitors to
bear all
Expenses.
Exhibitors
personally to
ivndertake
installation
and removal
of Goods.
Right reserved
to complete in
case of default.
6. — No Exhibits will be received before the 15th March, 1887, except by
special permission, and all goods must be delivered before the 15th April, and
be in order by the 25th April, 1887, under penalty of forfeiture of the deposit
and space allotted.
7. — All Exhibits must be in the name of the person making the application
for space, and no Exhibitor will, under any circumstances, be allowed to sub-
let or divide any space which may be allotted to him.
8. — No article which has not been clearly described in the application
form will be allowed in the Exhibition without the permission, in writing,
of the General Manager, and the Executive Committee reseives the right
to refuse or remove from the Exhibition, at any time, any article which may
be deemed unsuitable or objectionable, without assigning a reason ; and, if
necessary, to return any money paid for space, which shajl exonerate them
from any claim whatsoever on the part of the Exhibitor ( f the articles so
refused or removed.
9. — All cases must be unpacked immediately on arrival, and empty cases
removed from the Exhibition by and at the expense of Exhibitors.
10. — Exhibitors will have to bear all expenses of conveying, delivery, arrang-
ing, fixing, and removing their Exhibits, and also the cost of erection of all
fixtures, screens, and counters, when required.
11. — Exhibitors must personally, or by a duly-appointed agent, undertake
the reception, unpacking, installation, and (at the close of the Exhibition) the
removal of their goods. The Executive Committee reserve to themselves the
right of doing whatever may be considered necessary, at the expense of the
Extiibitor, should this regulation be uegheted.
No Offices
allowed.
Decorations and
Stand Cover-
ings,
Exhibitor, and the number of his stand.
13 . — Exhibitors may erect stands or such other contrivances as may be
necessary for the proper display of their goods, which may not, however,
without special permission of the Executive Committee, exceed eight feet in
height from the floor, so that they do not obstruct the view through the
avenues, or in any way injuriously affect other Exhibitors. Should this rule
be cont avened, the Executive Committee may at any t'me cause the removal
or alteration of the objectionable fittings.
14. — Offices will not be allowed except by permission of the Executive Com-
mittee, and no partitions or screens will be allowed in central places.
15. — All flags, banners, or other decorations will be entirely subject to the
approval of the Executive Committee ; and all stands, screens, counters, &c.,
must be covered with a material or paint, the colour of which \vill be selected
by the Executive Committee,
*16. — Signs or name boards, which must be new, must be placed parallel
with the main avenues, and in no case interfere with the lighting. They
must be black with gold letters, and their size and position subject to
the approval af the Executive Committee, and in accordance with special rules.
17. — All handbills, print^'d matter, or advertisements of any kind, in-
tended for distribution or display, must be subject to the approval and
permission of the Executive Committee, which permission may be withdrawn
at any time.
Floor must not flooring must not be altered, removed, or strengthened, except
be altered by permission of the Executive Committee, and at the expense of the
without
permission.
Signs.
Distribution
Display of
Handbills, <fcc.
Exhibitor.
Stands to be
kept clean.
19. — Exhibitors will be required to keep their stands clean and in good
order, and will be permitted to employ attendants for this purpose, and to
explain their Exhibits. Such persons may receive orders, but shall not
Solicitation of solicit them to the annoyance of the public or other Exhibitors, and any
Orders pro-
hibited. Exhibitor or Assistant so doing may be expelled from the building, and have
his ticket cancelled.
20. — Exhibits which are manufactured within the Exhibition may be sold
and removed, but no E.xhibit will be allowed to be removed from the
Exhibition without the written permission of the General Manager.
Executive Com- 21. — The Executive Committee will not be responsible for the loss of,
™wnsib?e^ for safety of any Exhibit, empty cases, tools, or other property of
loss or an Exhibitor or any other person, under any circumstances whatever ; and
damage. Exhibitors will be required to effect their own insurances against fire.
Sale and
Removal of
Exhibits.
All Exhibits
subject to lien be
for charges.
contractors
22. — All Exhibits shall be subject to a lien for any amounts which may
due to the Executive Committee or any of their duly-appointed
* This regulation has been altered in accordance with Rule 33, all signs or name
boards are made subject to the conditions in letter of allotment.
m
I
i
4 \
Dangerous
substances
excluded.
Certain Exhibits
subject to
special rules.
Right reserved
to analyse or
test any Ex-
hibit.
Exhibitors
causing
damage to
indemnify
Executive
Committee
from any
claim.
Tickets for Ex-
hibitors and
Attendants.
Technical Juries
Right to Photo-
graph, (fcC.
Catalogue.
Foreign
Applicants
Fine Arts,
Contravention
of Rules.
Right to alter
Rules.
23. — All fulminating, explosive, or other dangerous substances ar ab.solutely
excluded ; and any steam whistle, fog horn, or other article which may be
deemed in any way objectionable, will be accepted only subject to such
special rules as may be made.
24. — The Executive Committee reserve to themselves the right of ex-
amining, testing, or analysing any of the E.xhibits, for such objects as they
may think fit.
25 — If any damage or injury shall be caused or occasioned during tlie
Exhibition by any Exhibit, machine, conveyance, tool, ladder, or other appli-
ance, to any person or thing whatsoever, the Exhibitor to whom such belongs,
or who may be using the same, either by himself or others, shall indemnify the
Executive Committee, and hold them harmless against any action, suit,
expenses, or claim, on account or in respect of any such damage or injury
which may be so caused or occasioned,
26. — One ticket for the Exhibition will be granted to each Exhibit >r or
Firm, and for a reasonable number of attendants. If used by any Vjut those to
whom they are issued, or in case of misconduct or breach of these regulations
by the holders, the tickets will be immediately cancelled.
*27. — Should the Exliibitors in any Class require to have the relative merits
of their several Exhibits decided, the Executive Committee will, upon a requi-
sition being made to that effect, appoint a Technical Jury, for such purpose,
whose judgment shall be absolutely final and conclusive.
28. — No article exhibited may be photographed, copied, drawn, or repro-
duced in any way, without the permission of the Executive Committee.
29. — The Executive Committee reserve to themselves the sole right of
compiling and publishing a Catalogue of Exhibits.
30. — Applicants for space from Foreign Countries and the Colonies must
appoint representatives in England to act on their behalf.
31. — Fine Arts — Exhibits in this Section will be strictly limited to works
of art, viz.. Paintings in Oil and Water Colour, Sculpture, Engraving, Etching,
Lithography, Photography, and Wood Engravings produced in the United
Kingdom during the reign of Her Majesty the Queen. Intending Exhibitors
in this Section must make special application, under cover, to the Chairman,
Fine Arts Committee.
32. — The Executive Committee reserve the right to remove the goods of any
Exhibitor who may contravene any of these rules.
33. — The right to alter, amend, add to, or expunge any of these regulations
is reserved by the Executive Committee, and all who become Exhibitors shall
be deemed to have signified by so doing their acceptance of and agreement
with the whole of these regulations, and such others as the Executive
Committee may from time to time frame.
* Note.— R egulation No. 27 has been rescinded by the Executive Committee, in
ccordance with Rule 33. No Medals or Awards will be granted. —January 1SS7
liir
ROYAL JUBILEE EXHIBITIOH, MANCHESTER,
mi.
GUARANTORS.
William Abercrombie
Sir Wm. CunlifFe Brooks, Bart., M.P.
*Daniel Adamson
Broome, Foster, & Hallwoi*th
R. Affleck
i Burtles, Tate, & Co.
Charles James Agate
j William Carver
* Charles S Agnew
John Chadwick, Woodeville, Stockport
*Thoma.s Agnew & Sons
Joseph Challender
William Agnew
J. C. Chatwood
Thomas Aitken
Chubb & Son’s Lock and Safe Co., Limited
B. Alexan der
Neville Clegg
Councillor Andrews
S. W. Clowes
Sir Elkanah Armitage & Sons
Thomas Collier
*V. K. Armitage
James Collins
^Thomas Ashton & Sons
Co-operative Wholesale Society, Limited
Thomas Armstrong and Bros.
A. G. Copeland
E. Ashworth
Henry Crabtree & Son
John H. Bacon
Alderman Craven
John Bacon & Co.
Thomas Craven
* Alderman W. H. Bailey
John Craven
A. P. Baker
AVilliam Craven
C. L. Baker & Co.
Crewdson, Crosses, & Co., Limited
Henry Bannister
J. A. Cross
John B. Barber
Frank Crossley
Robert Barclay
* William J. Crossley
Barlow & Jones, Limited
Walter Crum & Co.
Edwin Barton
*Alderman Matthew Curtis
W. B. Bateman
Richard Curtis
William Batty & Son
H. Darby shire & Co.
Beaty Brothers
The Earl of Derby
James R. Beard
Dickson, Brown, & Tait
Beith, Stevenson & Co.
Dickson & Robinson
F. C. Bell
Edward Donner
Carter Bell
Doulton & Co.
*Alderman Bennett
The Earl of Ducie
George Benton
John Dugdale & Sons
A. Binyon, 75, Sackville-street
A. K. Dyson
William Berry
Wm. Eagles
The Blackman Air Propeller Ventilating
Lord Egerton of Tatton
Co , Limited
Elkington & Co.
Henry Blacklock & Co.
Elliott Lees, M.P.
S. D. Bles & Sons
W. T. Emmott
*Henry Boddington, Jun.
Councillor F. E. Estcourt
^Lawrence Booth
Ermen & Roby
*John Bowden
Geo. Fairclough
Joseph Bowker
George Falkner & Sons
Robert Boyd
Fallows & Keymer
Jabez Bradbury & Co.
Samuel Fielden
T. Bradford & Co.
*F. W. Follows
Bratby & Hinchliffe
Forsyth Brothers
Edward Briggs
J. Frankeuburg
Thomas Briggs
Louis Aubrey Franks
Jacob Bright, M.P.
John Furrell
W. H. Bi oadhead
•Charles J. Galloway
Jrr: _
*John Galloway, Jun.
Guarantors.
11
Edward N. Galloway
Robert Garnett & Sons
Jer. Garnett
R. H. Gibson
Councillor Robert Gibson
W. T. Glover & Co. _
Alderman Goldschmidt
Henry Goldsmith
E. Goodall & Co.
Grand Hotel Company, Manchester,
Limited,
Samuel Gratrix
Great Northern Railway Company (Lord
Colville, Chairman)
Sir Ed. Green, M.P.
John Greenall
Gregory & Haynes
James Gresham
Alderman Griffin
George Hahlo
Hardman & Co.
Hardman & Holdens
Harrison Patent Knitting Machine Co.
John Haslam & Co., Limited
B. Hastings & Co.
Wm. Hawkins
Jesse Haworth
Abraham Haworth
Rd. Haworth & Co.
Jos. Hedwig
B. Hembry & Co.
Heenan & Froude
A. & S. Henry & Co.
*Sir Joseph Heron
R. P. Hewitt
Harvey Heywood
^Oliver Heywood
John Heywood
Harvey Heywood
Abel Heywood & Son
John Hind
Hmdle, Norton, & Co.
Hermann Hirsch
* William Holland & Sons
Edward Holt
W. H. Houldsworth. M.P.
Isaac Hoyle, M.P.
E. G. Hughes
Campbell Hulton
* James F. Hutton, M.P.
Charles Illingworth
^Alexander Ireland & Co.
Joseph Jackson
George Jackson
Nathaniel Jacobson
* James Jardine
Catherine Jeeves
Thomas Jepson
De Jersey & Co.
*J. Thewlis Johnson
William H. Johnson
*James Johnston
Thomas Edward Jones
W. C. Jones
* James Kay
Thos. Kay
Peter Keevney
George Kenyon
John Kenyon
James Kershaw
William Kessler
N. Kilvert & Sons
Andrew Knowles
Lees Knowles, M.P.
John Knowles
L. N. Krause
Walter Laver ton
Denis Lee
’^Henry Lee
*Sir Joseph C. Lee
*C, E. Lees
Joseph Leigh
Lever Brothers
*Ivan Levinstein
Lewins A Co.
J. T. Lewis
Lewis’s, Market-street
Richard Livesley
Lloyd, Payne and Amiel
London and North-Western Railway
Company (R. Moon, Chairman)
James Lowe
Luke & Spencer, Limited
J. W. Maclure, M.P.
Charles S. Madan
John Madeley
David Madeley
Councillor Mainwaring
Manchester, Sheffield, and Lincolnshire
Railway Co. (Sir E. W. Watkin, Chair-
man)
Manchester Carriage and Tramways Co.
Manchester and Salford Equitable
Cooperative Society, Limited
*John Mark
Wm. Martin
John Mather
Mather & Platt
Isaac Mayer
Councillor Arthur McDougall
F. Mehl
David Midgley & Sons
Midland Railway Company (M. W. Thomp-
son, Chairman)
*John J. D. Milne
George Milner
Milners’s Safe Co., Limited
*John T. W. Mitchell
S. Moore & Son
Ludwig Mond
* Charles Moseley
*Joseph Moseley
T. Muirhead & Son
Jas. Murgatroyd
John C. Needham
Isaac Nield & Sou
7 ^^
12
(? uarantors.
Eobert Neill & Sous
James T. Newton
John Newton
Novel lo & Son
Ogden Henry J.
Orme & Sons
Thomas Parker & Son
C. Parkinson
J. & H. Patteson
Thomas Pattinson
Kichard Peacock, M.P.
Frank Pearn & Co.
John Pearson
J. and N. Philips & Co.
*S. K. & J. E. Platt
Platt Brothers & Co., Limited
Thos. Potts
Alfred H. Pownall
Railton, Sons, & Leedham
James Ramsay
James Reilly
Reiss Brothers
J. H. Reynolds
Richardson, Tee, and Rycroft
John Roberts
Robert Roberts & Co.
*James Robinson
H. L. Rocca & Co.
William Rose
C. Rowley
John J. Royle
William Rushtoii
John Rylands
Henry H. Sales
The Bishop of Salford
Charles L.
H. Samuel
William J. Saxon
Councillor Schou
*S. Schwabe & Co,
C, E. Schwann, M.P.
Robert Scott
Sharp, Stewart, & Co., Limited
•Henry Simon
Jos. W. Sidebotham,
Alfred Simpson
Edwin Simpson
Simpson & Godlee
Henry Slatter
F, Smallmau
Bryce Smith
Watson Smith
Smith, Wilson, & Smith
*Colonel Sowler
Reuben Spencer
Steiner & Co
Isaac Storey & Sons
J. Summerfield
George Sutherland
*W. G. & A. A. Sutherland
Councillor Swindells
George Edward Swindells
Charles J. Syrett
*W. H. Talbot
Tangyes Limited
Joseph Taylor
R. B. Taylor
Fred. Taylor
*Taylor, Garnett, & Co.
Alderman Jos. Thompson
Thompson, McKay & Co.
W. Thomson
Sir Humphrey F. de Trafiford, Bart.
Seymour Wade
Henry Wallwork & Co.
J. Walsh
Thomas Wardle
V. Weinich
S. Norbury Williams
Wilson Bros.
Wilson, Toft, & Huntley
T. R. Withecombe
W. H. Withington
J. Woodrow & Sous
James Woolley, Sons, & Co.
Godfrey Worthington
James Worthington
*Edwin G. Wrigley
Those marked * are members of the Council of Guarantors, Alderman Philip Goldschmidt
being the Chairman.
M
President and Vice-Presidents.
13
fteisJitlettt:
The earl OF SEFTON, K.G., Lord-Lieutenant of Lancashire.
C. M. KENNEDY, ESQ., C.B.
JOHN ADDISON, ESQ., Q.C., M.P.
JACOB BRIGHT. ESQ., M.P.
THE DUKE OF DEVONSHIRE. K.G.
THE DUKE OF WESTMINSTER, K.G.
THE EARL OF DERBY, K.G.
THE EARL OF ELLESMERE.
THE KARL OF DUCIE.
THE EARL OF LATHOM.
THE EARL OF CRAWFORD & BALCARRES.
VISCOUNT CROSS, G.C.B.
THE MARQUIS OF HARTINGTON, M.P.
THE LORD BISHOP OF MANCHESTER.
LORD VERNON.
LORD EGERTON OF TATTON.
LORD WINMARLEIGH.
LORD EDWARD CAVENDISH, M.P.
RIGHT HON. ARTHUR J. BALFOUR, M.P.
RIGHT HON. SIR JAMES FERGUSSON,
BART., C.S.I., K.C.M.G., M.P.
RIGHT HON. SIR U. J. KAY-SHUTTLE-
WORTH, BART., M.P.
SIR FREDERICK LEIGHTON, BART., P.R.A.
SIR HUMPHREY F. DE TRAFFORD, BART.
SIR WILLIAM CUNLIFFE BROOKS, BART.,
M.P.
SIR ARCHIBALD ORR-EWING, BART., M.P.
SIR ANDREW B. WALKER, BART.
SIR PHILIP CUNLIFFE-OWEN, K.C.B.,
K.C.M.G.
SIR JOHN GILBERT, R.A.
SIR JAMES D. LINTON, P.R.I.
SIR W. FETTES DOUGLAS, P.R.S.A.
HON. ALAN DE TATTON EGERTON, M.P.
HON. ALFRED EGERTON, M.P.
SIR HENRY ROSCOE, M.P.
SIR WILLIAM ROBERTS, F.R.S.
THE BISHOP OF SALFORD.
THE DEAN OF MANCHESTER.
THE WORSHIPFUL CHANCELLOR
CHRISTIE.
PRINCIPAL J. G. GREENWOOD, L.L.D.
VICE-CHANCELLOR A. W. WARDE.
THE PRESIDENT OF THE MANCHESTER
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE.
EDWARD HARDCASTLE, ESQ , M.P.
FRANK HARDCASTLE, ESQ., M.P.
W. H. HOULDSWORTH, ESQ., M.P.
H. H. HOWORTH, ESQ., M.P.
ISAAC HOYLE, ESQ., M.P.
LEES KNOWLE.S, ESQ., M.P.
ROBERT LEAKE, ESQ., M.P.
ELLIOT LEES, ESQ., M.P.
JOHN WILLIAM MACLURE, ESQ., M.P.
R. G. C. MOWBRAY, ESQ., M.P.
RICHARD PEACOCK, ESQ., M.P.
JOHN PENDER, ESQ., M.P.
THOMAS B. POTTER, ESQ., M.P.
CHARLES SCHWANN, ESQ., M.P.
JOSEPH W. SIDEBOTHAM, ESQ., M.P.
F. C. ARKWRIGHT, ESQ.
A. E. BATEMAN, ESQ.
THE MAYOR OF MANCHESTER.
THE MAYOR OF SALFORD.
THE MAYOR OF LIVERPOOL. ‘
THE MAYOR OF ACCRINGTON.
THE MAYOR OF ASHTON-UNDER-LYNE.
THE MAYOR OF BACUP.
THE MAYOR OF BARROW-IN-FURNESS.
THE MAYOR OF BLACKBURN.
THE MAYOR OF BOLTON.
THE MAYOR OF BURNLEY.
THE MAYOR OF BURY.
THE MAYOR OF CHORLEY.
THE MAYOR OF CLITHEROE.
THE MAYOR OF MACCLESFIELD.
THE MAYOR OF MIDDLETON.
THE MAYOR OF MOSSLEY.
THE MAYOR OF OLDHAM.
THE MAYOR OF ROCHDALE.
THE MAYOR OF SOUTHPORT.
THE MAYOR OF STOCKPORT.
THE MAYOR OF WARRINGTON.
THE MAYOR OF WIGAN.
14
Executive Committee.
<[:,xenttive (*!:ommittee:
Sir JOSEPH C. LEE, Chairman.
Mr. CHARLES J. GALLOWAY, Deputy-Chairman.
ALDERMAN PHILIP GOLDSCHMIDT, Treasurer.
Mr. C. P. SCOTT, Honorary Secretary.
ABEL HEYWOOD, Jun.
The Chairman, Deputy-Chairman, Treasurer, and Honorary Secretary constitute a
Special Committee known as the Executive Officers. They are also ex-officio
Members of all Sectional and other Committees.
LANCASHIRE AND YORKSHIRE BANK, LIMITED.
PAYNE, GALLOWAY, k PAYNE.
guuUtof;& :
BROOME, MURRAY, & CO.
gvcUitcttis :
MAXWELL & TUKE.
gtrchitrctjsi for (Did PaiuhciSitcf and ^alfonl.
DARBYSHIRE AND SMITH.
(C'ottduct0t 0f titc ^ubikc (f:xhil)lti0n gaud.
EDWARD DE JONG.
(Dfuetal Pauaoev:
S. LEE BAPTY.
^wutaty :
ANDREW A. GILLIES.
(Dtfircjsi :
EXHIBITION BUILDINGS, OLD TRAFFORD
CHARLES S. AGNEW.
GEO. AY. AGNEW.
AVILLIAM AGNEW.
V. K. ARMITAGE.
^Y. MARK ASHTON.
ALDERMAN AY. H. BAILEY.
J. H. BUXTON.
JOHN BOAA’DEN.
NEVILLE CLEGG.
WILLIAM J. CROSSLEY.
RICHARD CURTIS.
F. W. FOLLOWS.
JOHN GALLOWAY, Jun.
ALEXANDER IRELAND.
JAMES KAY.
C. E. LEES.
IVAN LEVINSTEIN.
CHARLES MOSELEY.
JOSEPH MOSELEY.
JOHN D. MILNE.
JOHN 'PLATT.
AA’ATSON SMITH.
AV. G. SUTHERLAND.
THOMAS SOAVLER.
HON. AAHLLIAM VERNON.
THOMAS AA^ARDLE.
gaubfvjsi
Sectional Committees^.
^^ctional €!0mmittecj6i j
SECTION I.
INDUSTRIAL DESIGN.
NEVILLE CLEGG, Chairman; W. G. SUTHERLAND, Vice-Chairman.
Committee :
Colonel SALIS SCHW.\BE.
C. P. SCOTT.
J. WATERHOUSE.
HENRY WHITEHEAD.
G. F. ARMITAGE.
W. MARK ASHTON,
LENNOX B. LEE.
J. H. REYNOLDS.
SECTION II.
MACHINERY.
W. J. CROSSLEY, Chairman; C. E. LEES, Vice-Chairman.
Committee :
JAMES GRESHAM.
HAROLD LEE.
JOHN PLATT.
GEORGE CAWLEY.
JOHN CRAVEN.
RICHARD CURTIS.
SECTION III.
CHEMICAL AND ALLIED INDUSTRIES.
I. LEVINSTEIN, Chairman; WATSON SMITH, Vice-Chairman,
Committee :
Dr. D. B. HEWITT
A. HOEGGER.
Prof. J. J. HUMMELL.
Dr. F. HURTER.
SAMUEL MELLOR.
Dr. E. SCHUNCK.
J. CARTER BELL.
F. BADEN BENGER.
H. BRUNNER.
F. ERMEN.
C. ESTCOURT.
JOSIAH HARDMAN,
SECTION IV
HANDICRAFTS AND OLD MANCHESTER AND SALFORD.
ALDERMAN BAILEY, Chairman ; J. D. MILNE, Vice-Chairman.
Committee
THOMAS BARRACLOUGH.
THOMAS A. BAZLEY.
JOHN BOWDEN.
J. H. BUXTON.
F. W. FOLLOWS.
WALTER HIGGINBOTTOM.
Colonel F. HOWARTH.
JAMES JOHNSTON.
GEORGE MILNER.
ALBERT NICHOLSON.
Hon. WILLIAM VERNON.
SECTION V.
WORKS.
JOHN BOWDEN, Chairman ; J. H. BUXTON, Vice-Chairman.
Committee :
ALDERMAN BAILEY. CHARLES MOSELEY
HENRY BODDINGTON. JOHN NEWTON.
EDWARD N. GALLOWAY. JAMES RAMSAY.
GEORGE MILNER. * EDWIN SIMPSON.
16
Sectional Committees.
SECTION VI.
FINE
ARTS.
WILLIAM AGNEW
.Chairman; JOSEPH MOSELEY, Vice-Chairman.
Committee:
GEORGE AGXEW, Hon.
Secretary.
C. J. POOLEY.
PETER ALLEN.
GEORGE T. REDMAYNE.
T. GAIR ASHTON.
EMIL REISS.
THOMAS JOHNSON.
ALFRED WATERHOUSE.
C. E. LEES.
R. WILLIS.
JAMES MURGATROYD.
lion. WILLIAM VERNON.
•
SECTION YII.
MUSIC, ELECTRIC LIGHTING, REFRESHMENTS AND GARDENS.
CHARLES MOSELEY, Chairman; CHARLES AGNEW, Vice-Chairman.
Committee :
V. K. ARMITAGE.
GEORGE FREEMANTLE.
E. J. BROADFIELD.
W. GRIMSHAW.
JOSEPH BROOME.
C. J. HALL.
GEORGE CAWLEY.
JAMES KAY.
W. J. CROSS LEY.
Colonel SALIS SCHWABE.
BRUCE FINDLAY.
„ SOWLER.
F. W. FOLLOWS.
SECTION VIII.
FIN.ANCE AND AUDIT.
JOHN GALLOWAY,
Jun., Chairman
; V. K. ARMITAGE, V’ice-Chairman.
Committee :
CHARLES AGNEW.
■ JOSEPH MOSELEY.
Alderman GOLDSCHMIDT.
Colonel SOWLER.
ALEXANDER IRELAND.
PHOTOGRAPHIC SECTION.
ABEL HEVWOOD, Jun., Chairman.
Committee :
WARWICK BROOKS.
SAMUEL OKELL.
A. BROTHERS.
J. T. POLLITT.
W. I. CHADWICK.
E. LEADER WILLIAMS.
J. R. GREATOREX.
SILK SECTION.
THOMAS WARDLE,
Chairman; JOHN BIRCHENOUGH, Vice-Chairman.
Committee :
Sir GEORGE BIRDWOOD.
HARVEY HEYWOOD.
DENNIS BRADWELL.
T. G. LOMAS.
EDWARD T. BROADHUR.ST.
ARTHUR NICHOLSON.
Rev. G. F. BROWNE, M.A.
JOHN THORPE.
J. CHADWICK, Jun.
Alderman A. S. TOMSON.
II. T. GADDUM.
G. C. WARDLE, Hon. Sec.
GEORGE GRIFFIN.
Sectional and Special Committees.
IRISH SECTION.
RAILWAY TRANSIT, Ac.
EXECUTIVE OFFICERS.
V, K. ARMITAGB.
JOHN BOWDEN
W. J. CROSSLEY.
POLICE ARRANGEMENTS.
EXECUTIVE OFFICERS.
MALCOLM WOOD.
T. WALTON GILLIBRAND.
GEORGE LORD.
RECEPTIONS COMMITTEE
LORD SEFTON.
LORD EGERTON OF TATTON.
LORD HARTINGTON.
LORD HERSCHELL.
SIR H. F. DE TRAFFORD, BART.
THE EXECUTIVE OFFICERS, Ex-officio.
CHAIRMEN OF SECTIONS, Ex-officio.
i
INTRODUCTION
ORIGIN AND INCEPTION OP THE EXHIBITION.
The first public step towards the promotion of the Manchester Royal
Jubilee Exhibition was a meeting of the citizens, held in the Town Hall
on June 11, 1886, when a resolution was unanimously passed affirming the
desirability of commemorating the Jubilee Year of the Queen’s reign by
holding “ a National Exhibition of Arts, Science, and Industry.” Practical
effect was at once given to this resolution by the appointment of a large and
representative Committee, which, within the space of four months, had
arranged all necessary preliminaries for the commencement of the Exhibition.
A guarantee .fund of ,£133,331 was raised; a site at Old Trafford, adjoining
the Botanical Gardens, was selected; the plans of Messrs. Maxwell and Tuke
architects, were adopted ; and a contract for the execution of the buildings was
signed with Messrs. Robert Neill and Sons.
From the time of its commencement the work went on smoothly and rapidly,
and ill their efforts to get the Exhibition really complete and ready for opening
by the date originally fixed, the Committee were zealously assisted by all who
were in any way concerned in the execution of the scheme. Of the success of
those efforts the public must be the final arbiters, and the Committee have
every confidence in anticipating a fiivourable verdict.
Numerous applications for space for exhibits were received very soon after
the holding of the Exhibition had been definitely fixed ; and by the time when
the Committee was ready to consider the applications, it was found that far more
space had been applied for than could by any possibility be allotted. It was
absolutely necessary, therefore, to make a selection of them, and in doing this
the Committee acted on the principle of choosing not only those exhibits which
were, in its opinion, the best, but also those which would most thoroughly and
successfully carry out the idea and object of the Exhibition, and render it
most varied and most comprehensive, as well as most attractive. As a result of
this necessity of selection, forced as it was upon the Committee by the
limitation of the space at its disposal and by the enormous number of the
applications, many exhibits had to be declined which were of great merit, and
which were intrinsically equal to those which were accepted. Intending
exhibitors, therefore, who failed to secure acceptance of their applications, may
' 5 #
20
INTRODUCTION.
console themselves with the knowledge that their failure was not due to any
demerits in their productions, but solely to the exigencies of the the space at
disposed of the Committee.
OBJECT AND SCOPE OF THE EXHIBITION.
The general object and scope of the Exhibition is best described in the
I’rosix'ctus as follows : —
“ The object of the Exhibition will be to illustrate, as fully as possible, the progress
made in the development of Arts and Manufactures during the Victorian era, principally
under the following sectional headings : —
1. Industrial Design, as shown in Textile Fabrics, Pottery, Glass, Metal, Wood,
Marble, and Stone Work, and all useful Articles having a decorative or
ornamental design.
2. Machinery in Motion, and general Engineering Plant and Appliances.
3. Chemical and allied Industries.
4. Handicraft Work in process of production.
5. Works Committee ; and Representation of Old Manchester and Salford ;
Model of the Ship Canal, &c.
6. Fine Arts — limited to Works of Art produced in the United Kingdom during
the reign of Her Majesty the Queen.
7. Electric Light, Music, Horticulture, &c.”
Of these sectional headings we will speak presently ; but before doing so
wc would jx)int out the vastness and completeness of the Exhibition as a
whole. Nothing, perhaps, will illustrate this more strikingly than a comparison
of the size and area of other recent Exhibitions with those of the Royal
Jubilee Exhibition, 1887. In 1886 there were three great Exhibitions — in
London, in Liverpool, and in Edinburgh. The total area covered by these was
22, 35, and 16 acres respectively, while the area covered by the buildings alone
was 10, 9, and 6 respect! wly. In the present Exhibition the total area is 45
acres, while the buildings area is 14 acres. Still more striking is the comparison
of the area assigned to Machinery in these four Exhibitions ; for while in London
it was 25,000 square feet, in Liverpool 45,000 square feet, and in Edinburgh
17,000 square feet, in Manchester the space allotted to machinery covers no
less than 135,000 square feet, or half as much again as the other three put
together. In other respects, and notably in its completeness of plan and
symmetry of arrangement, in its architectural features, in its artistic
decoration, in its perfect collection of pictures and sculpture, and in its
provision for the c<jinfort and enjoyment of visitors, the Manchester Exhibition
will compare favourably with all its predecessors.
INTRODUCTION.
• 21
SECTIONAL HEADINGS.
It is impossible, in a general introduction like this, to deal fully and
minutely with the various Sections into which the Exhibition is divided — and
the full and complete Catalogues which are published render any such detailed
treatment unnecessary — but a few words may with advantage be devoted to
each Section by way of preface to the Official Catalogue of Exhibits.
INDUSTRIAL DESIGN.
An appropriate motto for this Section would be the well-known line of
Horace : “ Omne tulit punctum qui miscuit utile dulci ; ” for its
object is to illustrate the great advance made during the last 50 years in
what are known as the “Applied Aits.” In every kind of manufacture in the
present day art work and decorative design play a far more important part
than they played a few years ago, and the neglect of this element is a fatal bar
to competition. The result is that beauty of form and colour is in countless
ways presented to us in an ever-increasing degree, not only through its proper
and special medium of the Fine Arts, but in our houses, our furniture, our
dresses, and in a vast number of things, which were summarily classed by our
forefathers as “useful articles.” We are getting so accustomed to this that we
can scarcely realise how great the change has been in degree as well as in kind.
But the splendid collection of exhibits in this Section brings it clearly and
succinctly and comprehensively before us. Textile ffibrics, pottery, glass, metal,
wood, marble, and stone work are all grouped and arranged on this principle of
exhibiting in their workmanship originality of design, grace of form, and beauty
of colour, as well as perfection in execution. An enumeration of even the
various classes which are included in this extensive Section is impossible here ;
but we may point out that it separates itself into four main divisions, viz.,
(1) Loan Collection of Textiles and Fabrics, Ancient and Modern ; (2) Original
Designs for Textiles, Pottery, Metal Work, Furniture, &c. ; (3) Objects of
Industrial Design ; and (4) Artisans’ and Women’s Industries, such as Fan
Painting, Embroidery, Wood and Stone Carving, and the like.
SILK INDUSTRY.
Among the textile fabrics Silk holds so important a place that the
Committee decided to make it a Sub-section by itself ; and to judge by the
excellence of the department they were fully justified in doing so, for we
have here a complete and most interesting panorama of the silk industry, from
the eggs, larvae, and moths of the various kinds of silkworm, through the
various processes of reeling', throwin^^, spinning, and dyeing, up to the manu-
factured fabric in all its varied forms. It includes also specimens of the silk
fabrics of all countries, one or two looms in operation, and — what will probably
prove one of the most attractive teatures of the Exhibition — Indian artisans at
wort on one of their native looms.
We have already referred to the unprecedently large area devoted to this
Section. This was only to be expected in an Exhibition which has for its
principal object the illustration of progress made in the scientific development
of Arts and Manufactures during the last fifty years, seeing that that progress is
to manufactures. Still more was it to be expected in an Exhibition held in
Manchester — in which town, and in the surrounding district, more than
It was, therefore, a happy thought which led the Committee to exhibit models
of old and out-of-date machines side by side with the marvellous creations of
engineering and mechanical skill and ingenuity which have done so much to
revolutionise the trade and manufactures of this district, and to give to it the
pre-eminence which it enjoys in all the markets of the world. Steam and
Electricity are the two great material forces of modern times, on the utilisiition
and application of which have depended in the past, and will depend in a still
greater degree in the future, our comfort and our prosperity. There can,
therefore, be nothing more interesting than to see the various ways in which
these giants are constrained and guided by the intellect of man to work for him
and to achieve results for him which, without their aid, would be impossible
and even inconceivable. It is this interesting — we may almost say, entrancing —
spectacle which is supplied in the Machineiy and Engineering Section with a
completeness and perfection of detail which far surpass anything of the kind
heretofore attempted.
In this Section we have an illustration of the practical value of Science
which ought to satisfy the sternest advocate of the doctrine of utilitarianism.
It was the boast of Socrates that he had brought Philosophy down from heaven
to dwell among men ; and here we have a proof that Science has left the closet
r
%
%
%
and the laboratory to do good and useful work in the factory and the mill.
To the majority of visitors it will be a revelation to see how closely the science
of Chemistry touches and affects our greatest industries, anrl especially what a
prominent part it plays in their decorative side, by supplying colours and
pigments of infinite variety. Its influence on Hygiene is better known, though
perhaps not much better understood, and the exhibits which illustrate this
influence will certainly be of wide interest. Metallurgy and Electro-Chemistry
are also included in this Section, and some of the exhibits cannot fail to
suggest that the efforts of the old alchemists to produce a transmutation of
metals by chemical processes were not such wild and absurd dreams as they
are generally supposed to have been.
PHOTOGRAPHY.
Connected with the last Section, but treated as a Special Sub-section, is
Photography, to which this honour is appropriately assigned, inasmuch as it is
essentially a product of the Victorian era, the whole of its history being comprised
within that period. The Section is designed to illustrate that history by
examples of photographs, and also to show the many industrial, as well as
artistic and scientific purposes to which Photography is now applied.
HANDICRAFTS IN OPERATION.
Though machinery has to so large an extent revolutionised manufacturing
that the very name is now almost a misnomer, yet there is still room for the
“ work of a man’s hands,” and a Section has been accordingly assigned to
handicrafts in operation. The selection of these has been guided chiefly by a
consideration of the amount of ingenuity and manual skill exhibited in their
operation, and they include textile fabrics and clothing, turning, engraving,
carving, embossing, and moulding, metal work, instrument-making, and sundry
other handicrafts which do not admit of classification under any of the above
heads. All these are practical illustrations of various methods in which men
and women may earn a livelihood by work done in their own homes, and for
the most part without the aid of steam and machiner}^ Some of these are
exhibited in the main building of the Exhibition ; but a home for the majority
has been appropriately found in the reproduction of streets and buildings in
OLD MANCHESTER AND SALFORD.
For a complete description of this most interesting and delightful section we
must refer visitors to the special “Guide,” and content ourselves here with a
24
INTRODUCTION.
very "eneml statement of its contents. Its object is to reproduce fi\c-similes of
old historic buildinpfs in Manchester and Salford, and to present to the nineteenth
centmy a livin" and faithful pi9turc of the streets through which our forefathers
walked, of the houses in which they dwelt, of the shops and market-places in
which they transacted business, and of the churches in which they worshipped,
and beneath the shadows of which many of them now sleep. Starting with the
old Roman Colony planted at Mancunium, we pass through a fortified gateway
built by the Roman legions, up a steep incline, into a narrow street, the houses
on either side of which nearly meet in their upper stories, while their ground
floors are occupied with shops and stalls which are knowm to have been situated
in the Market Street of Old Manchester. Thence we wander through the
Market Sted, past the old Exchange and Smithy Door, to Old Salford Bridge,
on one end of which is erected an ancient chapel, while at the further
end stands the tower of the Old Church, now the Cathedral, fi’om
which peals a carillon of beautiful bells. Old Ancoats Hall and many
another interesting old building may be seen by the visitor wdio deviates fi’om
the main path by which \ve have led him into the winding and tortuous
by-streets included in the Section ; but we have not space for specific mention
of them, and must pass on beyond the Bridge to Chetham’s College, with its
old gateway, through w’hich we emerge into the gardens.
MUSIC, ELECTRIC LIGHTING, HORTICULTURE, &c.
Wisely recognising the necessity of catering for the popular taste, as well
as that of supplying instruction and the more solid attraction of mechanical,
industrial, and other exhibits, the Committee created this department into a
Special Section, and a variety of attractions will be supplied, which may be
roughly grouped under one or other of the above headings.
The (ireat Organ, specially built by Messrs. Bishop & Co., of London — wdiich
is placed at the eastern end of the long nave — and a band of sixty performers
will supply the chief permanent attractions in the way of music. To these will
\ye added frequent performances by the best bands both in England and the
Continent, and by occasional instrumental and vocal concerts.
The whole Exhibition is lighted by electricity, and the charming effects
which can be produced by this wonderful discovery are exquisitely illustrated
every evening after dusk by the “Fairy Fountain” in the Cardens. The
lighting of the Palmliouse Dining-room by glow-w’orm lamps interspersed
among the foliage of the trees and shrubs, and the moonlight effects in the
streets of Old Manchester and Salford, are also highly attractive features,
and will make the Exhibition a very popular evening resort.
The acquisition of the Botanical Gardens supplies the element of outdoor
attractiveness which is so essential to the success of any Exhibition ; and
they have been laid out and arranged with the utmost picturesqueness. The
same taste and skill is conspicuous in the disposition of the flowers and shrubs
on either side of the Great Avenue, the effect of which is so entrancing
that it almosts tempts the incoming visitor to remain where Nature’s work is
so exquisitely displayed, instead of proceeding further to the inspection of tlie
triumphs of man’s art and science.
Ample provision has been made by the Committee for the comfort of visitors
in the way of dinners, refreshments, &c. In addition to the large Dining-room in
the Palmhouse of the Botanical Gardens, to the lighting of which we have just
referred, there are Dining-rooms, Refreshment-rooms, and Cafes in both the
main buildings, one adjoining the Irish Section and the other in the grounds
outside the Machinery Annexe. In this very important and ess6iitial feature
the Exhibition fully maintains its high standard of excellence, and visitors have
no cause to fear that their enjoyment will be marred by the neglect or careless-
ness which too often renders this department in Exhibitions very unsatisfactory.
IRISH SECTION.
It was a peculiarly happy impulse which prompted the Exhibition
Committee and the Dublin Committee to assign a special Section to the
exliibition of the products of Irish Industries and Manufactures. Apart from
the concentration of public attention on Ireland, due to political considera-
tions, it is specially appropriate that in a Lancashire Exhibition prominence
should be given to productions of that country, because of the intimate
commercial relations subsisting between this country and Ireland. The
principal English ports at which Irish productions are landed are in Lancashire,
and probably no other single English town buys so much from Ireland in the
way of meat, butter, and eggs, as Manchester. Moreover, the repressive and
protective legislation of the last century, which did so much to restrict and
ruin Irish trade and manufactures, was directly instigated by the jealousy ot
Lancashire merchants, manufacturers, and shippers ; and it may be hoped that
some compensation for this injury will be made by the unique opportunity
thus afforded to Ireland of exhibiting in a collected and comprehensive form
her chief industrial products. Visitors who do not know the country, and
many of whom may be prejudiced against it through that lack of knowledge,
will be astonished to see the number and quality of the exhibits in this Section,
which cannot fail to attract to itself special attention and interest.
26
INTRODUCTION.
FINE ARTS.
If the Victorian era is remarkable for the unprecedented development of
British Trade and Manuhictures, it is no less distinguished by the advance
made in the Fine Arts. Great as are the names of the artists of former days,
the period vhich can boast of Turner, Wilkie, Stanfield, Mulready, Leslie
Miiller, Landseer, De Wint, Cox, Front, Hunt, and Copley Fielding among
painters, and of Chantrey, Foley, and Gibson among sculptors, not to name
those illustrious artists who are still living, and amongst whom it would,
therefore, be invidious to make a selection for special mention, need not feajr
comparison with any other period. The collection here brought together
includes the best works of any artist of Great Britain and Ireland who has lived
and worked at any time during the last fifty years, and in this limitation of
time to the Victorian era the collection is absolutely unique. Of the merits of
the paintings, sculptures, engravings, etchings, and woodcuts included m it, it
would be impertinent, as it is supei-fluous, to speak. The arrangement of the
thirteen large galleries into which the Section is divided, the lighting of them
both by day and night, the precautions which have been taken to secure the
valuable contents from injury by fire or damp, the hanging of the pictures, the
disposition of the statuary, and the catalogue, which is full of interesting reading,
as well as being a useful guide— all these features combine, with the unequalled
merits of the works of art themselves, to render the Fine Art Section the most
attractive part of the Exhibition, and one which, by itself alone, will make a
visit to Manchester in 1887 a most delightful memorial of the Queen’s Jubilee
Year.
COMPLIMENTARY LIST
OF FIRMS AND INDIVIDUALS WHO HAVE RENDERED SERVICES
TO THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE.
§
til 5*7
COMPLIMENTAEY LIST
OF FIRMS AND INDIVIDUALS WHO HAVE RENDERED SERVICES
TO THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE.
Daniel Adamson & Co., Engineering Works, Dukinfield,
near Manchester.
Pair of Coupled Compound Horizontal Condensing Engines with
16in. and 28in. cylinders, 3ft. stroke, suitable for giving off 200 i.h.p. ;
the 16in. high-pressure cylinder, fitted with automatic expansion
gear; engines with rope driving. Patent Testing Machine, to test
up to 100 tons. This machine is arranged so that the full floating
weight of 161b. will register the maximum load. Observations can
be recorded when the specimen under test stretches 1,500,000th of
an inch.
Sir Richard Arkwright & Co., Cromford Mills, Cromford,
near Derby ; Masson Mills, Matlock Bath ; and 38,
George-street, Manchester.
Sir Richard Arkwright’s Original Cotton Spinning Machinery,
consisting of Lap Machine, for making laps by hand in canvas rolls.
Breaker Carding Engine (incomplete). Finisher Carding Engine,
with stationary flats and rollers. Lantern Slubbing or Roving-
Frame, with two lines, fluted bottom rollers (top rollers missing),
driven by upright drum, with callender rollers and can, with can-
turning motion. The Original Spinning Frame made by Richard
Arkwright, about the year 1769, and worked at the original mill at
Cromford, containing four spindles and flyers, with wharves for tape
driving, driven by upright drum ; stationary bolster rail with copping
rail worked by heart and lever lift, three lines of fluted bottom
rollers, front and middle top rollers leather covered, and wood bossed
back rollers, all weighted with dead weights, hinged thread boards,
traverse motion, Ac. Piece of original AVood Shafting.
G. F. Armitage, Altrincham.
Three Fine Antique Bronzes.
Mrs. Asheton Atkinson, Lyme Grove, Altrincham.
Cartoon of Two Panels. Design suggested by two of
Browning’s poems illustrative of two sides of Art. In the first
Nature is accepted a^ a perfect gift to be copied —
“ For, don’t you mark ? we’re made so that we love
First when we see them painted, things we have passed
Perhaps a hundred times nor cared to see ;
And so they are better, painted — better to us,
Which is the same thing. Art was given for that
— Robert Browning (“ Fra Lippo Lippi ’ ).
m
SI
30
COMPLIMENTARY LIST.
In the second a more spiritual Art is spoken of, one “ To bring the
invisible full into play !” A painter who touches this higher key
note can never attain his ideal. Giotto’s completed work was a
perfect circle, drawn by one stroke of his pen ; his “ great Campanile
is still to finish,” his idea of it never having been quite realised.
“ What’s come to perfection perishes.
Things learned on earth, we shall practise in heaven :
Works done least rapidly, Art most cherishes.
Thyself shalt afiford the example, Giotto !
Thy one work, not to decrease or diminish,
Done at a stroke, was just (was it not ?) ‘ 0 !’
Thy great Campanile is still to finisli.”
— Robert Browning (“ Old" Pictures in Florence.”)
John Ashton & Son, 36, Withy Grove, Manchester.
Double Straps, 75ft. by 11 in., and 75ft. by 5|in.
W. H. Bailey & Co., Albion Works, Salford, Manchester.
Steam Fire Engine, capable of throwing two tons of water per
minute 150ft. high, fixed in Machinery in Motion Section. Hand
Fire Pumps, the Sandringham pattern. Sundry Fire Brigade Fittings.
Fire Buckets. TuiTet Clock in Old Manchester Church Tower, with
four dials. Strikes the hours and chimes the quarters. W. H. Bailey’s
patent system. Thirteen Bells in Tower of Old Manchester
Church. W. H. Bailey’s Patent Carillon Hand Chime, which
enables one man to play tunes on the 13 bells. Turnstiles,
inlet and outlet, at the various entrances of the Exhibition.
Clock, West Nave. Bailey’s Patent British Empire Clock, total
diameter of dial 12ft. The hours are struck upon Harrington’s
patent chime tube, kindly lent by the inventor. The dial is so
arranged that not only is the Greenwich time indicated in the centre,
but also the time of day or night at some of the chief cities in Her
Majesty’s dominions. The sun at noon slowly moves round the dial,
and is opposite those cities upon which the sun is shining. Day time
and night time may be observed on the dial, and A.M. and P.M on
the clock may be known by the position of the artificial sun in relation
to the chief cities. An examination of the dial will enable an observer
to grasp the meaning of the saying that, “ The sun always shines
upon some part of the dominions of England’s Queen.” Hence the
name.
William Batty k Son, 9, Market-street, and 1, Cross-
street, Manchester; and 125, Lord-street, Southj^ort.
Round 8-day Timepieces, throughout the building. Eight-day
“Grandfather” Clock, with Harrington Tube Chimes.
Cardinal and Harford, High Holborn, London.
Turkish, Indian, and Persian Carpets. Oriental Rugs and
Curtains, and a large number of Indian Printed Cottons, used as
objects of decoration throughout the building, especially Carpets
used as Poilieres to entrance from Indian Court and on the south
window, and Antique Embroideries used in the decoration of Indian
facades.
.COMPLIMENTARY LIST.
31
Chubb
&c. ; chief
London.
ware-
& Sons Lock and Safe Co., Limited, makers to the
Queen, the Prince of Wales, the Bank of England,
&c.. Cross-street, Manchester ; also Liverpool, Wol-
verhampton, Bombay, Melbourne,
house, 128, Queen Victoria-street,
1. The Presentation Key, elabor-
ately wrought in gold, silver, and
jewelled, was given by this firm for
presentation to H.R.H. the Prince of
Wales at the opening ceremony. It
is embellished with appropriate em-
blems, and enclosed in a rich velvet
case. It is a master key of the Exhi-
bition, opening any of the locks. 2. The
300 Locks supplied by this firm for the ,
various exhibition buildings have
Chubb’s new silent, hinged latch action.
3. A Replica of the Gilded Cage, which
was made by this firm for securing the
Koh-i-noor, lent by Her Majesty the
Queen for the Great Exhibition of ’51,
has been made and sent in, on loan,
for exhibition in the Central Nave.
The precious gems it protects (exhibited
by Messrs. John Hall & Co.) are
automatically lowered at night by
guarded mechanism into a special make
of safe, the doors of which are simul-
taneously closed, and these are opened
in the morning, and the gems raised
by the same means, which cannot be
operated except at the will of the
' custodians. 4. The Executive, after
careful consideration, selected Chubb’s
Fire-Resisting Doors for protecting the
whole of the openings (over 30 in
number) in the Fine Art Galleries,
where some two million pounds worth
of pictures are thus protected. The
special precaution was also adopted of
securing the openings into the various
refreshment rooms by large fire-resist-
ing doors, made by Messrs Chubb.
The Key for presentation to H. R. H.
the Prince of Wales, on the occasion
of the opening of this Exhibition, has
been executed with due regard to the art
importance of the event. The column, or stem, is fluted as a classic
pillar, with composite capital, and small Lancaster Rose in the abacus.
An acanthus filiation is the basis, from which springs a heart-shaped
32
COMPLIMENTARY LIST.
head risiiie: with an added circle round the Manchester globe, and
snrmonnted by the coronet of the Prince. On the obverse, the fnll
blazon of the Arms of the City is given, in enamel colours, richly
painted, Avith supporters, crest, and motto, the Sword of Justice, and
the Civic Mace being placed as correlated emblems in saltire. The
reverse of key-head bears the correct plumes of H.K.H. the
Prince of Wales, Avith a series of artistic and industrial emblems
beside the shield for inscription. All these emblems relate to the
pui'pose of the Exhibition.
John T. Clarke, 78 , Faulkner-street, Manchester.
Indiambber Stamps (Hand, Self-inking, Dating, Pocket, tkc.),
and all other accessories.
Neville Clegg, Altrincham.
Fine Antique Bronze.
The Coalbrookdale Company Limited, Coalbrookdale
KS.O., Shropshire.
Cast-iron Vases, Garden Chairs, and Band Stand.
The Committee of Section No. 1.
The Committee have fitted up, furnished, and decorated the
Council Chamber, a room opening from the Indian Court, to
illustrate an Old English Banquet Hall. Specimens of Antique
Furniture have been kindly lent by various collectors. R. H.
AinsAvorth, Esq., of Smithills Hall, Bolton, has lent a Long Table, a
Settle, and 6 Armorial Chairs. Mrs. Caine, of Broughton-in-Furness,
Antique Old Cabinet. C. H. Nevill, Esq., of Bramhall Hall, various
specimens of Armour and Pewterware. Messrs. Shrigley and Hunt,
of Lancaster, 28 Stained Glass WindoAA's, illustrating the Arms of the
ToAvns of Lancashire. Messrs. Elliott, Edminson and Olney, of
Manchester, a Patent Wood Block Floor. Messrs. Cardinal and
Harford, of London, Fine Antique Eastern Rugs for the floor.
Lent by the Committee : a Caiwed Oak Mantelpiece, WindoAv Seats,
Chairs and Settles, Wrought-iron Fire Dogs, and Fittings for
Electric Light, Tapestry, Wall Hangings, &c. Also, the Chair-
man’s Room, decorated Avith materials lent by Messrs. Jeffrey & Co.,
of London, and furnished with inlaid mahogany, all from designs by
G. F. Armitage, of Altrincham. These articles Avill be for sale at the
close of the Exhibition.
John Cowley k Son, Hyde, Manchester.
ScreAving Machine for gas and steam piping. Parrott-nosed
Wrenches. Pipe Cutters, and other tools.
CowLiSHAW, Nicol k Co., Princess-street, Manchester.
Four Pairs of Portiere Curtains to Archway to dome. Portiere
Curtains to Wrought-iron Screen at entrance to Music Room and to
the Art Galleries.
COM?LTMENTx\KY LIST.
Craven Bros., Limited, Vauxhall Iron Works, Osborne-
street, Manchester.
Rope Power Travelling Crane, 26ft. span, will lift and travel a
safe working load of 20 tons, controlled by a man seated at one end
of the girders, where he has a clear view of the lifting hook, The
crane is driven by a small pair of direct-acting coupled engines, fixed
at one end of boiler house, with a rope pulley on engine shaft ; the
driving rope runs from this pulley the full length of gantry, and gives
motion to the crane in travelling or lifting in any part of the gantiy.
The man on the crane can stop and start the engines so that the
rope need not rim when the crane is not required. The crane is
carried by a gantry 1 50ft. long, of rolled iron girders, supported by
cast-iron columns independent of the Exhibition Building. The
crane was employed lifting the boilers, each weighing 21 tons, and
other heavy exhibits before the opening of the Exhibition, and will
be employed for the same purpose after the close.
Decauville Aine, 7, Idol-lane, London, and Petit Bourg,
France.
Decauville Portable Railway Wagons and Accessories. Decau-
ville’s Portable Tramway consists of short lengths of very light steel
rails, 'permanently rivetted to cross sleepers, and with end connections
of such a character that the rails make joint by being pressed into
contact. The jointing of the rails is exceedingly simple. The rail to
the right hand is furnished with two fish-plates ; that to the left with
a small steel plate rivetted underneath the rail and projecting l^^in.
beyond it. It is only necessary to lay the lengths end to end, making
the rail which is furnished by the small plate come in between the
two fish-plates, when the junction is at once effected, and the tramway
used without further preparation. Each section of 4, 8, 12, or 16ft.
is complete in itself, and thus the tramway can be laid down very
rapidly. Where divergencies of route take place, curves, crossings,
and light turn-tables are supplied, the main principle with these
pieces being that they are sufficiently strong to carry working loads,
at the same time that they are light enough to bo easily handled by,
at the most, two men. The lines most useful for quarries, brickfields,
farm, and general estate work, forest clearing, timber yards, or
plantations, are the 16in. and 20in. gauges, with rails weighing 91b.
or 151b. the lineal yard. The wagons are particularly designed for
contractors, mines, factory, farm, estate, and plantation work. They
are built mainly of steel, will pack very closely for shipment, and
have efficient means of lubrication, the axle-boxes being of improved
construction, securing them from the admission of dirt, whilst main-
taining a proper and equal supply of oil to the bearings.
Doulton and Co., Lambeth, London ; and 17, Deansgate,
Manchester.
Fountain, Balustrade, and Screen of Rod Cotta, under central
dome. The Fountain Pier is 30ft. in diameter. The Balustrade is
broken by four flights of steps. It is over 1 00ft. in diameter, 3ft. 3in.
....
liigh, and is richly modelled on both sides. SuiToimding this is an
arcade in four sections, each about 70ft. long and 6ft. high. The
columns, pilasters, spandrels, friezes and cornices are richly modelled.
The whole of the above work is from the designs of G. F. Armitage,
Esq.
Dickson and Robinson, 12, Old Millgate, Manchester.
Collection of Conifers and Evergreen- Shrubs.
Isaac Dixon and Co., Windsor Iron Works, Spekeland-
road. Edge Hill, Liverpool.
Iron Pavilion used by Exhibitors as Clubhouse, suitable for
Billiard, Reading, Mission, or School Room. Erected on island in
Botanical Gardens near the Fairy Fountain.
Dic'kson, Brown, and Tait, Nurserymen and Seed Mer-
chants, 43 and 45, Corporation-street, Manchester.
Collection of Shrubs and Trees planted in lawm near Band
Stand, also portion of the gi’ounds sown with our grass seeds.
Elgood Brothers, Leicester.
A Wrought-iron Bracket, to cany the signboard placed at the
entrance to the Art Gallery. Designed by G. F. Armitage.
Geo. Falkner & Son, Deansgate, Manchester.
Printing of all the Note Paper and Envelopes required, free.
Follows and Bate, Limited, Engineers, &c., Eroxiner-street,
Gorton, Manchester.
150 6ft. Gorton Lounges for the use of visitors in the
Picture Galleries. Six Follows and Bate’s Patent Lawn Mowers
for use in the Gardens. Horse Power Roller. Hand Power
Roller for the Lawns and Walks.
Frictionless Engine Packing Co., 27, Exchange Buildings,
St. Mary’s Gate, Manchester.
Patent Engine Packing for valves and engines.
The Government School of Art, Macclesfield ; Walter Scott,
head master.
Twenty-eight Drawings, I’aintings, and Designs, illustrating
some of the stages in the course of insti-uction given at the Maccles-
field School of Art.
W. & J. Galloway & Sons, Knott JVlill Iron Works,
Manchester.
10 Galloway Boilers, of 400 indicated h.-p. each, these
boilers being 30ft. long by 8ft. diameter, containing 2
fui'iiaces, and a Galloway back flue, with 38 Gallowa}- cone tubes and
water pockets. These boilers are entirely constructed of the best
ul
COMPLIMENTARY LIST.
35
selected steel plates, and are made suitable for an ordinary working-
pressure of lOOlbs. to the square inch. They are fitted with com-
plete set of mountings of the type ordinarily used by Messrs.
Galloway in all boilers they construct. When it is mentioned that
these boilers will evaporate 80,0001b. of water per hour, it will be
seen that with ordinary condensing engines they are^ capable of
providing sufficient steam for upwards of 4,000 indicated h.-p.
Messrs. Galloway have also fitted up the whole of the steam and
exhaust piping throughout the Machinery-in-Motion Department in
the Exhibition, leading the steam to the various engines in the
dynamo-house, and also the four large engines in the Machinery
Annexe, and further, the exhaust steam from these various engines
back to the main chimney, into which it is all conveyed, so as to avoid
the nuisance of exhaust steam being thrown up in the immediate
neighbourhood of the Exhibition itself. Altogether, in the Exhibition
Messrs. Galloway supply over 200 tons of pipes. Messrs Galloway
have also carried out the whole of the contract in connection with
the illuminated fountains, having fixed a compound horizontal
engine of 200 indicated h.-p., driving dynamos for illuminating the
fountains, and also a superposed horizontal compound engine of 185
indicated h.-p. for working the 6 ram pumps, which furnish water at
sufficient pressure to throw the jets the necessary height to make an
etlective display. It may be mentioned that these fountains are on a
much more extensive scale than any which have been hitherto
constructed, either for London or elsewhere ; and by the present
arrangement the whole of the various water jets and electric lighting,
with the appliances for varying the colours, are worked by two men,
which is a great improvement upon the London Exhibition, where
about 20 men were employed under these fountains for tlie purpose
of manipulating them and the coloured lights in connection there-
with.
Jesse Haworth, Woodside, Bowdon.
The Throne, Cartouche, Royal Axe, Signet, Chessboard, and
Chessmen of Queen Hatasu. Date, b.c. 1600. These remarkable
relics, the workmanship of royal artists 3,500 years ago, 200
years before the birth of Moses, are now being exhibited for the first
time, by the kind permission of their owner, Jesse Haworth, Esq.
Queen Hatasu was the favourite daughter of Thotmes L, and the
sister of Thotmes II. and III., Egyptian kings of the XVIII. dynasty.
She reigned jointly with her eldest brother; then alone for 15 years,
and for a short time with her younger brother, Thotmes III. She
was the Elizabeth of Egyptian history ; had a masculine genius and
unbounded ambition. A woman, she assumed male attire ; was
addressed as a king even in the inscriptions upon her monuments.
Her edifices are said to be “ the most tasteful, most complete, and
brilliant creations which ever left the hands of an Egyptian artist.”
The largest and most beautifully-executed Obelisk, still standing at
Karnak, bears her name. On the walls of her unique and
beautiful Temple at Dayr-el-Baharee, we see a naval expedition
sent to explore the unknown land of Punt, Southern Arabia, 600
4
veiu-s before the fleets of Solomon, and returning laden with
foreign woods, rare trees, gums, perfumes, and strange beasts. Here
we have Queen Hatasu’s Throne, made of wood foreign to Egypt,
the legs most elegantly carved in imitation of the leg of an
animal, covered with gold down to the hoof, finishing with a
silver Ivand. Each leg has caiwed in relief two Urtei, the
sacred cobra serpent of Egypt, under which form all the
goddesses were represented. These were plated with gold.
Each arm is ornamented with a serpent curving gracefully along
from head to tail, the scales admirably imitated by hundreds of
inlaid silver rings. Tlie only remaining rail is plated with silver.
The gold and silver are each of the purest, having no alloy. The
fragment of the Cartouche or oval bearing the royal name, and
once attached to the Throne ; the hieroglyjfliics very admirably carved
in relief, with a scroll-pattern round the edge, also round the margin,
and a feather pattern round the other. About one-third of the oval
remains, by means of wliich our distinguished Egyptologist, Miss Amelia
B. Edwardes, LL.D., has been able to complete the name, and identify
the Throne. On one side is the family name, “ Ba-ma-ka.” On the
other the throne name. “ Amen-Khnum-Hat-shep-su,’’ generally
abbreviated to Hatasu. With all its imperfections, it is unique,
being the only throne which has ever been disinterred in Egypt. The
Signet : This is a Scarabseus, in turquoise, bearing the Cartouche of
Queen Hatasu, once worn by her as a ring. The Chessboard and
Chessmen : These pieces are shaped like the head of the lioness,
signifying “ Hat,” the first hieroglyph in Hatasu. Fragments of
Glass Rods — use unknown. The carved face of the Goddess Isis,
boldly yet exquisitely-carved in dark wood. She was the wife of
Osiris. The coffin of Thotmes I. and the bodies of Thotmes II. and
III. Avere found at Dayr-el-Baharee ; that of Hatasu had disappeared,
but her cabinet was there, and is now in the Boulak Museum, and “ I
have no doubt whatever,” says Miss Edwardes, “ that these smaller
objects are from tlie cabinet and the throne from that tomb.”
& Co., Soho Iron Works, Bolton,
Ik^k, Hargreaves,
Lancashire.
High-class Steam Phigine, with Corliss Valves and Patent Valve
Gear. Built-up Cylinder, with separate Liner and Steam Jacket.
High-speed Governor and Knowles’s Patent Supplementary Governor.
Built-up Fly-wheel, grooved with deep grooves for rope transmission
on improved plan, with separate centre boss, arms, and segments,
fitted by special machinery. Patent Automatic Barring Engine, for
tui’iiing main engine automatic motion for moving into gear and
automatically out of gear when main engine starts. Photographs and
Drawings of Mill Engines, Patent Valve Gear, Ac. ]\Iain Driving
liines of Shafting, with couplings. New Patent Swivel Pedestals.
I’atcnt Selt-lul)ricating and ordinary l^edestals. Rope-driving Pulleys,
Belt Pulleys, Ac.
John IIevwood, Deansgate and Ridgefield, Manchester.
Copying Presses and Stands.
i
COMPLIMENTARY LIST. 37
The Lancashire and Cheshire Telephonic Exchange
Co. Limited (Kenneth Maciver, Secretary and General
Manager), 38, Faulkner-street, Manchester.
Telephones to various offices.
F. Leroy & Co., Gordon-street, Great Clowes-street, Lower
Broughton, Manchester.
Have coated all the Steam Pipes, &c., in the Exhibition with
their Improved Patent Non-conducting Composition.
Leveson & Sons, 35, Piccadilly, Manchester ; 90, New
Oxford-street, London ; 89, Bold -street, Liverpool ; 32,
Bond-street, Leeds.
Six Invalids’ Carriages, mounted on bicycle wheels, with rubber -
tju’es, and fitted with improved self-guiding front wheels.
Boger L, Lowe, Wood Block Flooring Works, Worsley-road,
Farn worth, near Bolton.
Lowe’s Patent Solid Wood Block Flooring in Pitch Pine, laid on
cement concrete bed, and permanently fastened with Lowe’s Patent
Preservative Composition, in vestibule, Royal Entrance.
H. AND J. Lyons, 19 Park-street, Manchester.
Writing and Copying Inks, Blue-Black, Scarlet, and Various
Colours. Sealing Wax for letters, parcels, and bottling, supplied to
offices.
John Morris & Sons, Engineers, Regent Works, Cross-lane,
Salford.
Morris’s Patent Instantaneous System of Fire Hose Couplings
including Standpipes, Branches, and all accessories complete for six fire
brigade vans. Captain Tozer’s Patent Twin Branch, with nozzles
and stand-rest. Twelve Morris’s Regent Hand Fire Pumps complete,
with bucket stands and 24 leather fire buckets. Four Morris’s
Corridor Fire Engines, mounted on two wheels, so as to be easily
wheeled about the Exhibition Buildings, complete with hose and jets.
Mather and Platt, Engineers and Machinists, Salford Iron
Works, Manchester.
Complete Electric Lighting Plant, for the Fine Art Section.
The plant comprises a pair of high-pressure vertical engines, arranged
for condensing, specially designed and constructed for the purpose.
Each engine is capable of indicating up to 150h.-p., and is provided
with patent automatic cut off, and has the cylinder steam-jacketed.
One engine drives two compound wound patent Manchester dynamos,
each capable of working 800 lamps of 20c. -p., when running at 730
revolutions. The second engine drives two shunt wound Edison-
Hopkinsun dynamos, each intended to work 500 incandescent lamps
of 20 Cl) lit a speed of 850 revolutions per minute. Both
pairs of dynamos are driven with a special sliort belt arrangement
to econoniise floor s])ace and ])rovide means lor taking up the slack
of the belt whilst running. In connection with these same engines,
Messrs. Mather and Platt liave a double cylinder diagonal engine
with automatic cut oft', driving a No. 6 Manchester dynamo, which
can be used either for lighting or for working the electric motors in
Messrs. Mather and Platt’s Machinery Exhibit, No. 384, Section
Machinery Annexe (West).
David Moseley & Sons, Chapel Field AVorks, Aidwick,
Manchester ; warehouses, 2, 4, and 6, Nbav Brown-
street, Manchester; 14, Aldermanbury Avenue, Lon-
don, E.C. ; 57, Miller-street, Glasgow; 20, Rue des
MaiWs, Paris; 14, Place Sainte Gudule, Brussels.
Treads for Staii*s, and all Mats required.
John IMusohave & Soxs, Limited, Globe Iron Works, Bolton,
Lancashire.
Horizontal Compound Steam Engine, 4ft. stroke, ^high-pressure
cvlinder 21 in. diameter, low-pressure cylinder, 3 /in. diameter,
fitted with Musgraves’ patent traversing Corliss valves, automatic
slii>motion and quick-speed governor ; fly rope drum between
cylinders 20ft. diameter, grooved for 15 IMii. ropes; Whitworth
hollow-compressed fluid steel crank shaft and crank pin. 4 his
engine is prepared for the application of condensing apparatus,
rurning or Barring Engine, with Musgraves patent automatic safety
apparatus. Duplicate Turning or Barring Engine, with Musgraves’
uatent automatic safety apparatus.
C. H. Nevill, Bramhall Hall.
Two Fine Antique Bronzes.
F. AND C. OsLER, Broad-Street, Birmingham ; and 1 00,
Oxford-street, London, W.
Ciystal Fountain in Chemical Section.
Patrick O’Connor, High-,street, Wavertree, near Liverpool.
Automatic Hinges for folding doors.
Perkins, Son, and Barrett, The Forge, Bradford.
The whole of the Steel Shafting, Stands, Plummer Blocks,
and Wrought-iron Main Driving and Transmitting Pulleys in the
Dynamo Department, transmitting altogether alxmt 1,100 indicated
liorso power. They also supply tlie whole of the Main and Line
Sliafting, Rope and Main Belt Pulleys for the tliree lines in Section
two. Machinery in Motion Department, tlie wliole lieing driven by
Messi-s. Adamson’s Engine. The Wronght-iron Belt Pulleys are of
Perkins, Son, and Barrett’s well-known manufacture, which have
COMPLIMENTARY LIST.
39
become one of their principal specialities. Three styles of Flanged
Couplings are shown, viz., the Recessed Flange, the Ordinaiy Flange,
and the Marine Flange, in which the coupling is forged solid with
the shaft, and makes at the same time a strong, neat, and light job.
Frank Pearn & Co., Engineers, West Gorton, Manchester.
Pumping Engine ror Boilers.
The Misses C. and J. Pbeston, 1, York Terrace, Chester-
road, Old Trafford, Manchester.
Drawings of the Royal Jubilee Exhibition, Manchester,
photographed by the Misses C. and J. Preston from the original
tracings.
William Rose & Co., Fire Engineers and Hose Manufac-
turers, Grosvenor Chambers, Manchester.
Fire Appliances.
Shrigley and Hunt, John-o’-Gaunt’s Gate, Lancaster, and
28, John-street, Bedford Row, London, W.C.
Council Chamber : The upper lights throughout are treated with
the Arms of the Boroughs of Lancashire. Below each shield is a
scroll setting forth the date of incorporation, or where this date is
uncertain, by whom the charter was granted, e.g.^ Lancaster, by John
Earl of Moston (afterwards King John). The shields are surrounded
with ornaments introducing the Lancaster Rose. Commencing with
the bay window on the west side of chamber the shields ire arranged
in the following order (see below). Bay Window, West Side :
1. Liverpool. 2. Preston. 3. Clitheroe. 4. Manchester. 5. Salford.
6. Lancaster. 7. Wigan. 8. Bolton. 9. Ashton-under-Lyne. 10.
Warrington, and 11. Oldham. Straight Window, East Side,;
12. Blackburn. 13. Rochdale. 14. Stalybridge. 15. Burnley,
and 16. Barrow-in-Furness. Bay Window, East Side : 17. St.
Helens. 18. Bootle. 19. Bury. 20. Manchester. 21. Darwen.
22. Salford. 23. Accrington. 24. Heywood, and 25. Chorley. The
lower lights of the windows are fitted with ornamental lead glazing
in tinted glass.
West Side.
123456789 10 11
East Side.
25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12
Singer & Sons, Art Metal Workers, Frome, Somerset.
Eight Wrought-iron Bevel Standards, for electric lamps, standing
at the head of the flights of steps leading to the dais.
40
COMPLIMENTARY LTST.
Richard Sykes, Edgeley House, Stockport ; E W. Joynson,
Ashfield, Sale; Neville C.legg, Oldfield Brow,
Altrincham.
Specimens of the Native Grasses of the North American Com
linent, collected by Mr. Sykes in Iowa Dakota, U.S. The wild
prairie m-asses differ from any of the cultivated grasses of England
Those of the andropogon and panicum species are specially worth
notice. Also Specimens of AVheat, Barley, and Indian Corn Also
splendid show collection of Indian Corn, shown at Chicago m T>ecem-
ber last. This Chicago exhibition was promoted by Mr. Orange Judd,
of the Prairie Farmer, Chicago, was of the highest importance,
and compiised prize corn from the States of Illinois, Indiana, is-
consin, Ohio, Iowa, Minnesota, Kansas, Nebraska, Missouri, and
Michi‘^an The exhibitors purchased and imported specially tor tins
jubike a portion of the Prairie Farmers’ Collection, consisting of over
5,000 ears of Indian Corn.
Slack and Brom’Nlom', Canning AVorks, Upper Medlock-
street, Manchester.
Filters for use in gardens.
Henry Thomas; Messrs. Alexander Wright & Co., 10,
Mawson’s Chambers, Deansgate, Manchester.
The Schulke Ilegenerative Gas Light for domestic and public
lighting.
Tho.s. Thomas & Sons, Hoisting Engineers, Acme Hoist
AVorks, Cardiff:
Self-sustaining Hoisting Machinery. Acme Passenger Elevator,
to cany four persons, shoAvn at work, conveying A'isitorsto and fiom
the galleries of this section. Hand-power Single AVarehouse Lift
fui TcAvt. Hand-poAver Single Dinner Lift for IcAvt. Single Grocers
Sack Lift for 3cwt. Double Grocers’ Sack Lift for 3cwt. Derrick
AAdnch, for 1 ton direct from the barrel. Hoisting (Jrab for I ton
(double purchase).
Henhy Whitehead, Bury.
Fine Antique Bronze.
Jame.s AVrigley k Son, Limited, Bridge Hall Mills,
Bury, Lancashire.
Donoi’s of the Stationery used in carrying on the correspondence
of the Koyal Jubilee Exliibition.
The Patent Waterproof Paper and Canvas Co.,
Limited, Willesden Paper Works, Willesden Junc-
tion, London, N.W.
Tent, 10ft. square.
SECTION I.
NDUSTRIAL DESIGN.
1 Isaac Bury, Adelphi Dyeing and Finishing Works,
Salford, Manchester.
Bleached, Dyed, and Embossed Calicoes, Embossed Prints,
Embossed Velvets.
2 Henry Marriott & Co. Warehouse, 23, Portland-street,
City; works, Newbridge Mills, Stockport.
Coloured Cotton Fabrics made for East and West Indies, Africa,
South America, Mexico, Brazil, and the Australian Colonies.
3 William Holland & Sons, Victoria Mills, Miles Platting,
Manchester.
Sea Island Cotton in its various processes : raw, carded, combed,
and prepared for spinning. Combed Cotton Yarns. Single 20’s to
200’s Cops for Thread and Muslin Manufacturers. Combed Water
Twist, 20’s to 70’s, for AVarps, in balls and chains. Two-fold Cops,
AVarps, and Bundles, Gassed Yarns, Hard and Soft Twist, Sewing
Cottons, 3, 4, 6, and 9 cords in skeins, grey, best qualities. Fine
Heald Yarns.
4 W. T. Ashton & Son, Stanley Mill, Whitefield, and 6,
Dickinson-street, Manchester.
Fancy AA^oven Cotton Fabrics, Oxfords, Harvards, Zephyrs,
Galateas, Mattings, Denims, Ticks, Regattas, Ginghams, Italian
Checks, Handkerchiefs, Coloured and Check Dhooties, Sarongs,
Putzoes, Lungis, and Specialities for Africa, India, and South
America.
5 William Holt k Sons, 37, York-street, Manchester;
mills, Walshaw, near Bury.
AVhite Toilet, Honeycomb, Grecian, Coloured Alhambra, and
Embroidered Quilts. Toilet Covers. Toiletings. Perched Quiltings.
Piques. AVhite and Coloured Vest and Fancy Quiltings. Plain and
Embroidered Antimacassars.
6 Lee and Hargreaves, 7, Pook-street, Manchester ;
Hooley Bridge Mills, Heywood.
and
Towellings, viz.. Cotton and Linen Turkish. Fancy and Striped
Turkish. Tenw Cloths. Bath Blankets,
honeycomb, and huckaback.
Bath Gowns, cotton.
I
I
: ^ I II HI _*■ _
44
SECTION I.
7 Bakker & Co., Limited, Springfield Towel Works, Stock-
port.
AYhite Cotton Turkish Towels. Brown Linen Turkish Towels.
Fancy Striped Turkish Towels. Fancy Striped Terry Pieces.
8 Wm. Bashall & Co., Farington Mills, Preston; 12,
Chatham- street, Manchester.
White Domestic Calicoes, Longcloths, Mediums, Twills, Ac.
Ladies’ Underclothing manuhictured from above.
9 Fred. E. Jackson & Co., 6, Union-street, Church-street,
Manchester.
Target and other Coloured Woven Cotton, Union and Wool
Shirtings. To be seen in process of manufacture in Section 2, Stand
426. Stacksteads Pure Calicoes, original make.
10 John Haslam & Co., Limited; warehouses. Fountain-
street, Manchester, and 7, Watling-street, London ;
mills, Halliwell Cotton Works, Derby-street Mills;
and Lark Hill Mills, Bolton-le-Moors.
Sea Island and Egyptian Cotton, in the various stages of manu-
facture, from the raw material to the finished article. Cop Yarns,
viz., Twist, Pin Cops, and Weft from 20’s to lOO’s counts. Muslins,
Cambrics, Lawns, Mulls, Jacconets, Nainsooks, Ac. Brocades, Checks,
Stripes, and Cotton Dress Costume Fabrics, white and in colours.
Sateens, Cashmeres, Cashmerettes, Oatmeals, Ac. White Shirtings,
Loiigcloths, Mediums, Twills, Ac. Kershaw’s Cellular Cloth.
11 Geo. Thomas & Co., 28, Deansgate, Manchester.
Universal Yarn Assorting Balance for indicating the counts of
yarn in small pieces of cloth (cotton, linen, woollen, Ac.).
12 Hermann J. Haiilo, 41, Faulkner-street, Manchester.
Grass, Cotton, Linen, India Tapes, Silk, Cotton, China Ribbons
and Flosses.
13 Crewdson Crosses & Co., Limited, 40, Portland-street,
Manchester.
Mediums. Shirtiners and
Longcloths.
Sheetings. Double
Warps and Twills.
1 4 Peter Beid, Caledonian Dye and Bleach Works, Pendleton,
Manchester.
Bleached Cotton Cloth. Dyed Cotton Cloth. Printed Cotton
Cloth. Dyed Cotton Yarns.
15 Arthur S. Plews, 13, Nicholas-street, Manchester.
Plain, Dyed, and Printed Sateens and Drillettes. Oatmeal
Cloths. Piques. Plain and Fancy Muslins and Cotton Dress Goods.
W'
16 Jabez Johnson, Son, Allsop & Co., 44, Spring Gardens,
Manchester; 10, Milk-street, Cheapside, London; 2,
Loyal Exchange Court, Queen-street, Glasgow ; 2, Lue
Vivienne, Paris.
Toilet, Marseilles, Honeycomb, and Alhambra Quilts. Toilet
Covers. Toiletings. Table Covers. Curtains. Linen and Cotton
Turkish, Honeycomb, and Fancy Towels. Cotton Blankets and
Sheets. Quiltings. Piques and Damasks.
17 Bond and Riley, 14, Calendar-street, Palace Square,
Manchester ; works, Milton Mills, Bolton.
Toilet, Alhambra, Honeycomb, and other Quilts. Table Covers,
Prayer Mats. Jergas, &c.
18 Richapd Haworth & Co., 28, High-street, Manchester;
works, Egerton and Tatton Mills, Ordsall-lane, Salford.
Bleached Calicoes and Sheetings. Dyed and Printed Linings,
Fustians, Velvets, and Velveteens. Plain, Printed, and Woven
Window Blinds. Heald Yarns. Crochet and Sewing Cotton.
Fishing Net Yarns, and Reed Band.
19 The Hollins Mill Co., 14 & 16, Mosley-street,
Manchester; works, Hollins, Marple, and Wellington
Mills, Hazel Grove.
Bleached Sheetings. Bleached Shirtings, Longcloths, Wigans,
Mediums, Croydons, Twills, and Double Warps. Dyed Beetled
Twills and Pocketings. Printed Silesias, Satins, and Black Backs.
Grey Lustre Linings. Dyed Velveteens. Window Blinds in plain
colours, printed in stripes, art designs, both single and reversible ;
also woven coloured stripes.
20 W. M. Christy & Sons, Limited, 14, West Mosley-
street, Manchester, and Fairfield Mills, Droylsden,
near Manchester.
Turkish Towels and Bath Blankets. Huckaback, Honeycomb,
and Fancy Towels.
21 McIntyre, Hogg, & Co., 16, Newton-street, Manchester;
3, New Basinghall-street, London, E.C.
Gentlemen’s Shirts and Collars, cotton, linen, woollen, and silk.
22 McConnel & Co., Limited, 90, Henry-street, Ancoats,
Manchester.
Cotton from its raw state to yarn ; also various articles
manufactured from cotton yarns, as laces, curtains, velvets, &c.
“=— iS
23 SwAixsox, Birley, & Co., Fishwick Mills, Preston ; 7,
Charlotte-street, Manchester.
Longcloths, Shirtiiiirs, Mediuius, Sheetiii<rs, <tc. ; plain and
fancy Muslins, Sateens, Matelasses, Drills, and Costume Cloth.
24 James Chadavick k Bro., Eagley Mills, near Bolton.
Cotton, Linen and "Worsted Tapes, Boot "Welis, Bed Laces,
"Window Blind Cords, Super Linen Ladder AVeb, Artistic Picture
Cord, Coi-set Cord, Carpet Binding, Stay Tape, Mare Ribbon, etc..
Blocked Chinese Tape, Super Stout India Tape, Brussels Carpet
Binding.
25 Lor. Bierfreuxd, Odense, Denmark.
Curtains and Fimiiture Coverings of Jute.
Fancy Cotton Goods.
Coloured and
2G Kearns, Allan, k Co., 4, South
Chester ; and Turkey Red Dye
Accrington,
King- street, Alan-
M^orks, Baxenden,
Cotton Yarns, dyed in hank. tVoveii Cotton and Linen Goods,
containing coloured yarns. Dhooties. Plain and Figured Linen and
Cotton Towels and Glass Cloths. Oxford Shirtings. Coloured
Damasks. Nottingham Lace, containing coloured yarns. Bordered
Handkerchiefs. Specimens of Coloured Yarns ready for use. Coloured
^Yoollen M"eft, for making headings in cotton cloths. Specimens of
Handwork with dyed cottons. Specimens of Dyeing Materials used
to produce the coloui*s. Specimens of unusual Dye Stuffs, and
Cottons dyed therefrom
27 Elkington k Co., St. Ann’s-square, Manchester.
A Selection of Art Metalwork in silver and electro-plate,
enamels. Arc., including original repousse productions and facsimile
copies of the same. A variety of Reproductions from South
Kensington and the principal museums of Europe, showing examples
of the Classic, Gothic, Renaissance, and other periods. A selection
of Jugs, Cups, Candelabra, Arc., in the new art gold bronze. A
quantity of Silver and Electro-plated Goods, Cutlery, Ac.
28 Walker k Hall, Electro AVorks, Sheffield.
Sterling Silver, Electro-plate, and Table Cutlery.
29 R. R.\:srsp,OTTOM, 81, Market-street, Manchester.
(bills, Rifles, Revolvers. Fishing Rods, Flies, and Taekle
Cricket, Lawn Tennis, and other outdoor games and sports.
INDUSTRIAL DESIGN,
47
30 Thomas Armstrong & Brother, 88 and 90, Deansgate,
Manchester.
Clocks, Watches, Gold Chains, and Jewellery. Spectacles and
Eye Glasses. Artificial Eyes. Cases of Test Glasses, Ophthalrnascopes,
and Test Types for Oculists. Race, Field, and Opera Glasses.
Aneroid and Mercurial Barometers, Thermometers, Saccharometers,
Hydrometers. Microscopes and Microscopic Objects. Surveying
Instruments, Levels, and Theodolites. Astronomical and other
Telescopes. Photographic Lenses and Cameras. Magic Lanterns
and Slides.
31 Joseph Gillott & Sons, Victoria Works, Graham-street,
Birmingham.
Specimens of Steel Pens, in the various stages of manufacture.
Finished Pens, and Fancy Coloured and Ground Pens.
33 William Ford Stanley, 4 and 5, Great Turnstile, Holborn,
London, W.C.
Cases of Patented Drawing Instruments. Improved Eidograph.
Improved Pentograph. Patented Protractor. Improved Dumpy
Level. Theodolite, with electrically-illuminated axis. Improved
Miners’ Dial. J. Ainsler’s Integrator. Polar Planimeters, and Current
Meters. Patented Scales, and various instruments.
34 Mesdames Scown and Newling, 64, King-street, Man-
chester.
Cane’s 3ft. Sin. Brass Folding Cot, trimmed. Model Cot, in
black and white, japanned, trimmed. Royal Nursery Cot. Wicker
■ Bassinette. Wicker Infant’s Baskets. Folding Iron Baskets. Stand
Wicker Baskets.
35 Gilbert James French, 31, Manchester-road, Bolton,
Lancashire.
Altar Cloth. Communion Linen. Carpets. Tapestries. Com-
municants’ Kneeling and Seat Rugs. Pede Mats. Ecclesiastical Chair.
Kneeling Hassocks and Pads. Clergy and Choir Cassocks, Surplices,
Hoods, and Stoles. Ecclesiastical and Emblematic Banners. Em-
broideries, and other articles of church furniture and decoration.
36 Horrockses, Miller & Co., Preston, London, and
Manchester.
White Calicoes and Sheetings.
37 Barlow & Jones, Limited, 2, Portland-street, Manchester.
Toilet, Marseilles, Patent Satin, Tapestry, Mitcheline, Honey-
comb, Grecian, Alhambra, and Oriental Quilts ; Cotton Sheets and
Cotton Blankets for export. The Royal Velvet Twill Sheets and
Siieetings Bath Sheets. Dusters. Sponge Cloths. Antimacassars.
jh£isik-
m
<
<
48
SECTION I.
Honeycomb, Huckaback, Fancy and Osmau Turkish Towels.
Tapestry Tablecloths. Quilting and Satin Toilet Covers, printed and
embroidered. Wliite, Dyed, and Printed Damasks. Toiletings.
Vestings. Piques. Perched Quiltings. Swansdowns. Tiny Cloth.
Canvas and Angola for embroidery. Fleece Door Mats and Hearth
Rugs.
38 Tootal, Broadhurst, Lee & Co., 56 to 62, Mosley-street,
and 2, Charlotte-street, Manchester ; Sunnyside Mills,
Bolton ; Ten Acres Mill, Manchester ; Black Lane Mills,
RadclifFe ; and Dan Lane Mills, Atherton.
Plain and Fancy Muslins and White Dress Goods. Plain and
Fancy Skirtings. All and Mixed Silk, Woollen, and Cotton Dress
Goods. Piques. Fancy Printed Calicoes and Muslins. Velveteens.
Yarns and Sewing Cottons.
Handkerchiefs.
Sateens and Linings.
39 The Rossendale Printing Co., 33, George-street, Man-
chester.
Printed Cretonnes in Reps, Toile a Voile, Sateens for Quilts,
Crepes, Twills, &c. Printed Calicoes of all kinds for home trade and
export. Printed Fancy Cloths of various kinds for dresses.
40 Joseph Waterhouse, Hall Bank, Bowdon, Cheshire.
Designs for Printed Fabrics.
S 41
Leon Lang, Designer,
Manchester.
16, Peel Terrace, Old TrafFord,
Designs for Calico Printing.
& Son ; works,
Manchester ; office.
Sycamore-street,
15a, York-street,
42 Robt. Fielding
Oldham-road,
Manchester.
Large Design of a figured silk handkerchief, for weaving portrait
of Her Majesty Queen Victoria and other portraits, and illustrations
of various incidents which Lave occurred during the Queen’s lifetime.
A handkerchief woven from the above design is exhibited. Can be
seen weaving in the loom of the Bradford Manufacturing Co., in the
Machinery Annexe East, Stand No. 389. Two Designs for silk dress
cloths, with samples of silk cloths \voven from them. Design for
cotton dress fabric, with sample of cloth woven from it. This design
can be seen weaving in the loom of Devoge ct C<\, Jacquard machinists.
Stand No. 372, in Machinery Annexe East. Sketches for various
styles of cloth, in which the design is to be w'oven by the Jacquard
machine.
43 The Tiiornliebank Company, Limited, 43, Portland-
street, Manchester; 4, West Regent-street, Glasgow;
106, Cheapside, and 79, Gresham-street, London, E.C.;
works, Tiiornliebank, near Glasgow.
Calico Prints, Fancy Dyed Goods, and Printed Cashmeres.
INDUSTRIAL DPISIGN.
44 F. W. Grafton & Co., 91, Portlancl-street, Manchester.
Calico Printing.
45 S. ScHWABE & Co., 41, George-street, Manchester, and
Rhodes Works, near Middleton.
Printed Cottons.
46 William Watson & Co., 60, George-street, Manchester.
Printed Cottons.
47 Samuel Knowles & Co., Tottington Mills, near Bury,
and 66, Mosley-street, Manchester.
Printed Calicoes, in Turkey red and extract styles, chiefly
Furnitures for curtains and hall decoration.
48 Gemmell and Harter, The Radclilfe Printing Co.,
Limited, 16, Charlotte-street, Manchester ; works,
Radcliffe.
Printed Cottons.
49 & 50 The Dacca Twist Company — Rylands & Sons,
Limited, New High-street, Manchester, and Wood-
street, London.
Calicoes — Crey, Bleached, Scoured, and Dyed — comprising every
description and quality, both in plain, twilled, and fancy makes.
Floor Oilcloths of every description and qualit}". Toilet Covers,
F'ichus, Handkerchiefs, Dimities, Crepes, Cotton Diapers, Dyed
Damasks. Coloured Shirtings — Oxfords, Regattas, (fee., in all qualities
and designs. Turkey Red Twills, in all qualities. Shirts — White
and Coloured — in all varieties. Small wares of every kind. Sewing
Cottons, Tapes, Braids, Window Cords. Waddings in all colours.
Ladies’ and Children’s Underclothing, Stays and Corsets. Coloured
Mufflers, Ties, tfec. Umbrellas in all varieties. Eiderdown Quilts
and Fringes.
51 William Woollams & Co., 1 10, High-street (near Man-
chester Square), London, W.
Artistic Wall and Ceiling Papers free from arsenic. Patent
Embossed P’lock Papers. Coriacene (registered), a new embossed
imitation leatlier paper. Raised P'lock Papers for painting over.
Flock, Chintz, and Damask Papers on mica grounds.
52 Cassell & Co., Limited, La Belle Sauvage, Ludgate-hill,
London, E.C.
Art, Educational, and Popular Publications, Magazines, Serial
Works, (fee. Specimens of Electrotypes, Art Processes, Wood Blocks,
(fee. Cassell’s National and Red Libraries, (fee.
SPXTION I.
53 F. Steiner k Co., Church Works, Church, Lancashire;
Irwell Springs Works, near Bacup, Lancashire ; and
Manchester, London, and Glasgow.
Turkey Red Goods and Yarns. Turkey Red Prints, and Calico
Prints generally.
54 A & S. Henry k Co., 38, York-street, Manchester.
Velvets, Velveteens, Corduroys, Moleskins, Silk Plushes, Dyed
and Printed Silesias and Linings, White and Grey Calicoes, Oxford
and Harvard Shirtings, Shirts, Linens, &c.
55 Simpson and Godlee, Deans Mill, Swinton, and 51,
Portland-street, Manchester.
Damasks, Dimitties, Belgian Stripes, Cretonnes, Turkey Rod
Twills.
56 Albert Dux & Co., 36 and 38, Queen-street, and Sunny-
side Furnishing Works, Salford.
Cutting Machine for Velvets. Grinding Stone to sharpen the
knives. Various Dyed and Printed Cotton Goods.
57 Ralph Hall k Co., 27, Portland-street, Manchester.
Velveteens, Velvets, Dyed and Printed Linings, Drills, and
Sateens.
58 Broome, Hallwortii, and Foster, 4 and 6, St. Peters
Square, Manchester.
Velutina, an improved velvet pile fabric. Velveteens, Dyed and
Printed Linings and Dress Sateens, Lustrine Sleeve Linings.
59 Holroyd and Scott, Parkside Mills, Bradford.
Cotton Plushes, Silk Plush.
60 Anyon’s Patent Macrame Lace Loom Co., 97, Oxford-
street, Chorlton-upon-Medlock.
Macrame Lace Looms and Frames. Macrame Lace Materials
silk and twine. The Albion Darning Last. Sample of Work ma
up in Macrame, such as table, brackets, and drawing-room tidies.
61 Bayne k Son, Burnley.
Cotton Cords, as from the Loom. Cutting of the same in
process. Goods in the finished state.
62 William Cooke k Co., Grove Works, Clay pit-lane, Leeds.
Golden Lustre Silk. Paper Hangings.
i-
INDUSTRIAL DESIGN.
63 Isaac Chorlton & Co., 19, Blackfriars-street ; works.
Water-street, Salford, Manchester.
Metallic Bedsteads. Bedsteads combined with Spring Mattresses.
Steel Spring and Chain, Woven Wire, and other Spring Mattresses.
Ships’ Berths — single; also double-tier. Folding Spring Beds and
Stretchers. Invalid Appliance Spring Beds. Hospital Beds of
various descriptions. Invalid Spring Couches. Invalid Bed-Rests.
Patent Castors.
64 Jonathan Eobertshaw, Imperial Works, Cornhrook
Park-road, Manchester.
Persian Bedstead complete, fitted with double woven steel
wire mattress. Hospital or Servants’ Bedstead, fitted with chain
spring mattress, without wood frame. Chain Mattress, on wood
frame complete. Spring Wire Mattress, on Avood frame. Bed-
Rest, for supporting the back of an invalid in bed. Hair Mattress.
65 Frazer Bros., Summer Hill Foundry, and Wiggin -street
Bedstead Works, Birmingham.
Bedsteads in brass, composite, and iron. Bedsteads with patent
seat at end. Fenders and Kerbs in brass and iron. Fire Brasses and
Fire Irons. Dog Rests. Umbrella Stands. Fire Screens. Coal
Vases. Mirrors in repousse brass frames. Tile Hearths.
66 The Longford Wire, Iron, and Steel Co., Limited,
Warrington.
Longford Galvanised, Highly-tempered, Spring Steel AVire
Mattresses and Bedsteads, combined for domestic, hotels, hospitals,
and for use in institutions generally. Galvanised Woven Steel Wire,
for railway carriage seats, ships’ sofa berths, couches, billiard-room
seats, &c., also ships’ berths.
67 James Wrigley & Son, Limited, Bridge Hall Mills,
Bury, Lancashire; 21, Budge Eow, Cannon-street,
London, E.C. ; 29, John Dalton-street, Manchester.
Assortment of Papers, consisting of writing papers, Avhite and
tinted, all qualities ; plate paper, fine and superfine ; white and toned,
fine and superfine; printings, white and toned; various qualities
printings ; plate glazed printings for colour Avork ; super callendered
papers, antique papers, and etching paper; superfine litho cartridge;
splendid assortment of card boards, AAdiite and tinted ; various qualities
of iieAA^s ; 1 reel of newspaper, consisting of one continuous Aveb
4 miles 367 yards long; specimens of materials used in manufacture
of paper, shoAving the same in various stages of preparation ; 1 reel
of AATiting paper, in which the postal rates are AA^ater-marked 82,668
times, each Avater-mark representing one sheet of note paper.
68 The Committee of the Manchester Art Museum.
Ancoats Hall, Manchester.
Pictures and other Works of Art lent to Public Elementary
Schools in Manchester and Salford. Descriptions and references to
explanations in the Art Museum of the processes of AAdiich they are
products.
—^m '
52
SECTION I.
74
/ 0
77
79
80
81
82
Laueent Colas, Bogny Braiix, Ardennes, France.
Specimens of Patent Axle Fittings for coaches and wagons.
The Claviger Cycle Co., Limited, Mary-street and New
Bridge-street, Strange M^ays, Manchester.
Safety Bicycles, front and rear drivers. Tricycles, front and
rear drivers.
Sergeant and AValmsley, Bury New Bead, Manchester.
Small Canoe Landau, for one horse. Fitted with patent self-
acting head, mounted on elliptic and cross springs, with open heads
and indiarubber fittings. Collinge’s patent axles. All light steel
forgings.
Henry Fleetwood Lloyd, 12, Colquit-street, Liverpool.
Patent Folding Two and Four Wheel Albany CaiTiages.
J. A. Lawton & Co., 35, Hardman- street, Liverpool.
Full Lock Cee and Lender Spring Victoria Phaeton, fitted with
patent lever brake. Patent Automatic Head Lift, suitable for one or
a pair of horses. Canoe Landau, fitted with patent self-acting
automatic head lift, Ac., suitable for one or a pair of horses.
H. McMullen & Son, North Crescent, Hertford, Herts.
The Crescent Phaeton, registered, a four-wheel carnage, with
very short coupling and high wheels. The Crescent Car, registered,
a two- wheel, easy of access, with high wheels. The Olympia Phaeton,
a close-coupled four-wheel, of new design. 'J'he Olympia Cart, a two-
wheel, of new design.
Forder & Co., Limited, 7, 8, and 9, Upper St. MartiiTs-
lane, London, and Cleveland-road, Wolverhampton.
Patent Royal Hansom, hung upon Cee springs, with shackle
ends; body fitted with apparatus for opening doors by driver, metallic
front and side frames, polished brass, trimmed with black morocco,
with black and gold lace ; brass mounted lamps and furniture.
McN AUGHT & Co., 10, Park-lane, London; Worcester; and
13, Slater-street, Liverpool.
Light (eight inside) Omnibus, with head moveable to form Open
Brake. Single-seated Brougham for one horse.
Joseph Owen & Sons, 21, Grosvenor-street, C.-on-M.,
Manchester ; 67, St. Anne-street, Liverpool ; sawmills
and manufactory, Stanley ]\lills, Melrose-road, Kirk-
dale, Liverpool.
Bent and otherwise manufactured Timber used in construction
of vehicles ; shaft, and other bent timber ; pillars, beds, and other
body scantling and sweeps ; panels and other boards ; spokes, felloes,
naves ; architraves, moulds, skirting ; floor and matched boards ;
beetle-fal lei's, bobbin-blocks, picking-sticks, road timber, tool handles,
mangle rollers.
INDUSTRIAL DESIGN.
53
83 John Egberts, 6 , Cavendish-street, Stretford-road, Man-
chester.
Light Canoe Landau, with patent automaton head, levers for
throwing glass frames into doors, large front light to body, for one
or pair of horses. Cee and Underspring Ogee Back Victoria Phaeton,
with crane-neck perch, full lock forecarriage, morocco lining, silver
mounts, for one or pair of horses.
84 John Charles Windover, 29, Oxford-street, St. Peter’s,
Manchester.
Landau and Brougham.
85 The Steel Frame Carriage Co., Limited, Polygon
Avenue, Ardwick, Manchester.
Hansom Cab, fitted with patent ventilator, non-slipping treads,
and rubber tyres. Brougham, fitted with non-slipping treads, and
patent lock. Dog Cart, fitted with safety foot rests, non-slipping
treads and rubber tyres. Specimens of Panelling and Steel Frame.
86 George Morris, 5, Prince of Wales’-road, Norwich.
Gem Cart, fitted with automatic seats. Four-wheeled Dog
Cart, or Sporting Phaeton. Alexandra Car, to carry four persons.
87 and 87a Joseph Cockshoot & Co., New Bridge-street,
Strangeways, Manchester.
Brougham, Siamese Victoria, and Victoria Phaeton. Saddler}^,
Harness, &c.
88 M. Nairn & Co., Kirkcaldy, Scotland ; Canal-street,
Minshull-street, Manchester; 131,, Aldersgate-street,
London; 113, Centre-street, Glasgow; 57, Boulevard
Ornano, Paris.
Floorcloth and Linoleum.
89 The Bristol Wagon Works Co., Limited, Lawrence
Hill, Bristol.
Margetson and Hek’s Patent Screw Tip Cart, with Patent Brake.
Adjustable Dog Cart. Four-wheel Dog Cart Phaeton.
90 Anne Cowburn, Park Place, Cheetham, Manchester.
Pair-horse Landau, with inimitable head, noiseless, and draught-
excluding windows. Medium-size Brougham, with square front,
noiseless, and draught-excluding windows.
91 Thomas Briggs, Bridge-street; Patent Cart Works,
Darwen, and Chester Eoad, Stretford, Manchester.
Adjustable Two-wheeled Tipping Cart, fitted with noiseless
automatic brake on both wheels. Specimen set of Patent Fittings
for one cart.
92 Leveson & Sons, 35, Piccadilly, Manchester; 90 and 92,
New Oxford- street, London, W.C. ; 89, Bold-street,
Liverpool ; and 32, Bond-street, Leeds.
Bath, Chair. Invalid’s Carriage. Perambulators. Telescope
Couch and Chair combined. Merlin Chair. Reclining Chair.
CaiTA’ing Chairs. Bed Tables. Leg Rests. Bed Rests. Reading
Stands.
93 W. H. Cooke & Co., Woodalls Buildings and Water-
street, Manchester.
Doom. Turned Balusters. Turned Newels. Square-built
Newels, in walnut. Handrailing. Moulds. Architraves. Garden
Chairs. Garden Folding Chairs. Tables. Window. Trellis Work.
94 Monk and Newell, Ruabon, North Wales, and 14, Regent-
road, Bootle, Liverpool.
Manufixctures in Red, Buff, and Blue Terra-cotta.
95 R. AND A. Main, Argyle Works, Glasgow.
Gas Ranges, Hearths, and Heating Appliances.
97 The Anglo-American Tin Stamping Co., Limited,
Stourport, Worcester.
Stamped Seamless Tinned and Wrought-iron Hollo ware, plain
tinned, bright tinned, and Japanned ; also Enamelled Blue or Grey
and White and Patent Mottled Ware.
98 The Hepworth Iron Co., Hazlehead, near Sheffield.
Glazed Stoneware Sanitary Tubes and Fittings, Glazed Sinks,
Troughs, Vases, Flower Pots, Mignonette Boxes, Ac. Best Furnace
Fire Bricks, Blue Metal Building Bricks, Stable, Paving, and Wall
Coping.
99 Oates and Green, Horley Green Fire Clay and Sanitary
Tube Works, and Beacon Hill Fire Brick and Red
Brick Works, Halifax.
Glazed Bricks, white and coloured. Enamelled Sinks, white
and cane-coloured. Salt Glazed Sinks. Sanitary Horse Mangers
and Troughs, of glazed earthenware. Traps for streets, yards, and
houses. Chimney tops, for preventing down draught. Sundry
Sanitary Tubes. Fire Bricks, Air Bricks, Gullies, Traps, Ac., Ac.
Sink and Trap combined.
INDUSTRIAL DESIGN.
55
100 M. C. Duffy & Son, 66, Storks-road, London, S.E.
Immovable Acme Wood Block Flooring.
101 Edward Smith & Co., Coalville, Leicestershire.
Ornamental Floor and Wall Tiles. Embossed and Incised Tiles.
Hand-painted Tiles. Hearth Tiles. Photographic Art Tiles. Decorated
Tiles. Mosaic. Ten’a Cotta.
102 Edwards Bros., King-street, Fenton, Staffordshire.
White Granite Dinner, Tea, and Toilet Ware. Decorated
Granite Dinner, Tea, and Toilet Ware. Decorated Earthenware
(Ivory Body) Dinner, Dessert, Tea, and Toilet Ware. Decorated
Earthenware (White and Ivory Bodies) Vases. PhotogTaph and
Picture Frames.
103 Maw & Co., Benthall Works, Jackfield, near Ironb ridge,
B.S.O., Shropshire.
Floor Tiles. Mosaic Pavements. Wall Tiles for dados. Fire-
place Tiles. Art Tiles : Ruby Lustre. D’Oro Lustre. Persian.
Pottery : Lustre, Persian, Majolica.
104 J. L. Thomasson, Corn Market, Worcester.
Thomasson’s Multifidous Inlet Air Diffusers. The Floral
Architrave for festive floral decorations, &c. Devices and Memorial
Flower Helders. Jardinieres and Firegrate Screen. Aquaria Tanks.
105 Joseph Brooke and Sons, Hipperholme, near Halifax,
Yorkshire.
Glazed Bricks, Tiles, Porcelain Baths, Sinks, &c. York Stone.
106 Follows and Bate, Limited, Froxrner-street, Gorton,
Manchester.
Knife-cleaning Machines, Mincing Machines, Vegetable and
Suet Cutting Machines, Rapid Potato Mashers, Marmalade
Cutting Machines. Salting Instruments. Coffee, Pepper, Spice, and
Wheat Mills. Egg Whisks and Mixing Machines. Bread, Sugar,
and Almond Grating Machines. Bread Cutting Machines. Potato
Chip Machines. Tobacco Cutting Machines. Meat Presses. Lemon
Squeezers. Box Churns. Patent Simplex Cask Stand or Stillage.
Domestic Grindstones.
107 Shanks & Co., Tubal Works, Barrhead, N.B.
Bath (cast-iron). Plunge, Spray, Shower, Douche, and Sitz, with
walnut woodwork complete. Shanks’s Patent Copper Sitz Bath, fitted
in wood cabinet. Large Cabinet Stand, with Lavatory and Marble
Slab. Imperial and Citizen Baths. Imperial and Citizen Lavatories.
Folding-up Lavatories and Urinals. School Lavatories. Combined
Lavatories. Tubal Closets. Imperial Closets. Citizen Closets.
Reliable Syphon and Double-Valve Cisterns. Automatic Urinals.
Sinks. Samples of Brass Taps.
ircircir|
SFXTION I.
H. Sutcliffe & Co., 49, 51, and 53, Thomas-street,
Sluidehill ; works, 110, Great Ancoats-st., Manchester.
Grocers’ Tea Canisters, of various designs, ornamented in pearl,
paintings, and gold work. Ornamental Vases, ornamented as above
Ornamental Coffee-Grinding Mill.
Agate Counter Scales. Weighing Machines. Sets of
various kinds. Sack Truck.
Movable Pielieving Pillar Scale.
Weights of
109 Alfred Carter & Co., 10, South John-street, and
35, Norton-street, Liver|30ol
Enamelled Slate Wall Lining, in imitation of various marbles.
Slate Cisterns. Slate Lavatory Top. Slate Housemaid’s Sink.
Slate Shelving for Greenhouses. Slate Manger.
110 William Dale, 50, John Dalton-street, and 45, Cannon-
street, Manchester.
Ornamental Tiles for floors and walls, Tile Chimney Pieces, Tile
Hearths, Tile Fenders, Art Tiles for furniture and decorative purposes.
Ceramic Mosaics, &c.
111 W. & A. C. Eussell & Co., Scotia Foundry, Athole-
street. West Liverpool-st., Pendleton, near Manchester.
Cast-iron Mantel and Overmantel, with Balconettes in imitation
of Pollard Oak (enamelled). Electro Bronzed Canopied Interior and
dog grate to suit. Tile Hearth and Brass Fitted Fender and
Furnishings. Cast-iron Mantel find Overmantel, with Balconettes
in cream and gold, enamelled. Improved Canopied Hob Grate
with Tiles, Tile Hearth, Fender, and Furnishings to suit.
Cast-iron Mantel and Ornamental Walnut and Gold Enamelled.
Tile Register, Tile Hearth, Fender and Furnishings. Cast-iron
Combination Mantel and Overmantel in imitation marbles. Cast-
iron Combination Mantel and Overmantel relieved in colours
(enamelled). Cast-iron Mantel and Overmantel in black and best
B. V. Bronze with Register, Tile Hearth, Fender and Furnishings.
Cast-iron Combination Mantel and Overmantel relieved in colours.
Tile Hearth and Fender to suit. Group Cast-iron Mantel Registers
and Overmantels relieved in colours. Withington Patent Grate.
Various Panels in imitation of Marbles, &c. ^lirrors, Wall Brackets,
Ornamental Castings, &c. Group of Cooking Ranges and Kitchen
Mantels for coal and gas, with sundry Ornamental Artistic Iron
Castings, enamelled and decorated.
112 John Armitage & Son, Lees-street, Great Aucoats-stret,
Manchester; 140, Devonshire-street, Sheffield; works,
Deepcar, near Sheffield.
Terra-Cotta Mouldings, and Ornainental Stringcourses.
Statuary, Balusters, Panels, Finials and Terminals. Roofing Ridge,
and Garden Edge Tiles. Blue or Salt Glazed Sewer Bricks, Invert
INDUSTRIAL DESIGN.
57
Blocks, Sanitary Tubes, Fire Bricks, Chimney Tops, Vases, Trusses,
and Fire Clay Goods. Art Painted, Enamelled, and Majolica Tiles,
Glazed Tiles.
114 Joseph Hamblet, West Bromwich, Staffordshire.
Staffordshire Blue Bricks, Copings, and Terra Metallic Pavings,
encaustic and tessellated tiles, and red and buff terra cotta goods.
115 Robert Adams; works, 7, Great Dover-street ; offices
and Showrooms, 17, Blackman-street, Borough,
London, S E.
Spring Hinges, single and double action. Tongue Casement
Bolt. Reversible Window for Cleaning, fitted with Triumph Sash
Fastener. Pneumatic Fanlight Closer. Ratchet Fanlight Openers.
Link Action Fanlight Openers. R. Adam’s Patent Fanlight Centre.
Patent Fanlight Gussett for the exclusion of draught. Patent Case-
ments, Stays, &c. ■
116 John Watson, Globe Works, 2, Jordan-street, Little
Peter-street, Knott Mill, Manchester.
Outside Sun Blinds, Venetian, Festoon, Art Cloth, Art Cane,
Wire, Zinc, Art Glass and Cane Blinds.
117 G. M. Mansell, Ward’s Buildings, 47, Deansgate,
Manchester.
Revolving Shutters, Brass Sashes, Window Blinds, Iron Guards,
Ac., Glass Pavement Lights, Leaded Lights and Ornamental Glass.
Ventilators and Model Lift, Hoisting Apparatus, and Ornamental
Ironwork.
118 John Marsden, Varley-street, Oldham-road, Manchester.
Selection of Floor Cloths, finished and partly finished, showing
the progress of cloth from the canvas to the finished article.
119 Jas. F. Ebner, Clerken well-road, London, E.C.
Ebner’s Patent Hydrofuge S3’stem of la^fing parquet or Avood
blocks on concrete, stone, or ordinary fireproof constructions. A
system of dovetailing the wood to the concrete by means of a hard-
setting bituminous damp course. One-inch Solid Parquet for counter
floors. Solid Carpet Parquet for existing floors. Parquet
de Luxe. Art Joiner}". Enamel Mosaic. Marble and other Mosaic
Pavements. Improved Marble Ten-azzo Pavements.
120 The Keighley Timber and Saw Mills Company and
Planing, Moulding, Turning, and Steam- Joinery
Works, Lawkliolme, Keighley, Yorkshire.
Specimen Doors of steam macliine make. MachineiT-made
Window Work, and other Joinery. Samples of Turner}’. Samples
and patterns of Mouldings and Architraves. Samples of the Day and
Night Ventilating Architraves, Decorated Glass Window Screens, &c.
121 Craven, Dunnill & Co., Limited, Jackfield Works,
near Iron Bridge, Shropshire.
Artistic Tiles, painted, printed, embossed, glazed, and enamelled.
Ceramic Mosaic. Glazed and enamelled Ceramic Mosaics. Salopian
Artistic Pottery.
122 Macniven and Cameron, 23 to 33, Blair-street, Edin-
burgh.
Waverley, Pickwick, Owl, Hindoo, Flying “ J,” and other Steel
Pens. Steel Pens with turned-up points, turned-down points, oblique
cut points, and with simple ink-caiTying aiTangement. Quill Yielding
and Quill Spring Penholders.
123 ''Onward’’ Publishing Office (W. P.
secretary), 18, Mount-street, Manchester.
Temperance Publications.
Ingham,
124 D. Alexander Merrin, Royal Exchange Printing and
Publishing House, Strutt-street, Manchester.
Kindergarten Work. Memn’s Registered Paper-plaiting Demon-
strator. Star Series Folding Papers. Boxes of Folded Objects
and Forms and Stars. New Form and Colour Card. Miniature
May Pole Plaiting.
125 John T. Clarke, 78, Faulkner-street, Manchester.
Indiarubber Endorsing Stamps, Type, and requisites. Copper
and Wood Stamps. Whitby Jet Marking Ink. American Roller
Composition.
126 James Spicer & Sons, 50, Upper Thames-street, Queen-
hithe, and 92, Long Acre, London ; New Edmund-street,
Birmingham ; 20, Mount-street, Manchester.
Reams of Paper of various kinds. Fancy Box Stationery, Account
Books, Envelopes, Show Cases of Fancy Papers.
127 H. AND J. Lyons, L9, Park-street, Manchester.
Writing and Copying Inks, Blue-Black, Scarlet, and other
Colours.
Sealing Wax.
INDUSTRIAL DESIGN.
59
128 Samuel Moore & Son, 5, Duke-street, Cannon-street,
Manchester.
Specimens of Bindings for Presentation, Addresses, and Testi-
monials. Specimens of Account Books in vellum, russia, morocco,
and other bindings. Specimens of Letterpress Bindings.
129 John Heywood, Deansgate and Ridgefield, Manchester.
Bookbinding, Plain, Ornamental, Antique, and Richly Illumi-
nated. Illuminated Addresses. Account Books, including Bank
Ledgers, Invoice Books, Ac., in russia, vellum, calf, and other
bindings.
130 Novello & Son, 51, Corporation-street, Manchester;
Gothic Chambers, Erskine-street, Liverpool ; Nicholas
Chambers, Newcastle-upon-Tyne.
Plain and Ornamental Writing for advertising purposes. Illu-
minated Writing. Patent Automatic Advertiser.
131 Young J. Pentland, 11 , Teviot Place, Edinburgh.
Medical Publications. Anatomical Models and Preparations.
132 Shannon File Co., Limited, North Street, Moorfields,
London, E.C.
The Shannon Letter and Bill File. Binding Case. Filing
Cabinets. Roller Copier. Office Desks.
133 J. Curwen & Sons, 8, Warwick-lane, London, E.C.
Books and DiagTams for Teaching Music. Music in the Staff
Notation and Tonic Sol-fa Notation. Tonic Sol-fa System of Teaching.
131 George Cussons, 13, Tenerifie-street, Strangeways,
Manchester.
Wood Models for Teaching Art Drawing. Wood Models for
Illustrating Geometrical Drawing. Wood Models for Teaching-
Machine and Building Construction. Other Appliances for educational
purposes.
135 John J. Royle, 27 and 29, King-street West, Man-
chester ; 13, Red Lion Square, London; and 57, Hope-
street, Glasgow.
Assortment of Electro-plate and other Ware, showing the
application of Royle’s Patent Self-pouring system. Pendu Lights,
for suspending a light from an existing gas bracket or chandelier.
Tap Unions. Main Supply Filters. Argand Brackets. Pendulous
Kettles and Food Warmers. Rapid Muller.
136 H. Fourness & Co., 116 and 118, Princess-street,
Manchester.
Regenerative Gas Lamps, and Fittings for same.
60
SECTION I.
137 The Wenham Co., Limited (Samuel Gratrix jun.,
and Bro., Agents); works, Upper Ogle-street, Fitzroy
Square, London, \V.
Regenerative and Ventilating Gas Lamps.
138 London and Manchester Eeflector Co., 74, Oxford-
street (St. Peter’s), Manchester.
Day and Gaslight Reflectors, and Jewellers’ Outside Reflecting
Lamps.
139 William Wilson & Co., 50, 52, and 54, King-street,
and St. James’s Square, Manchester.
Wood and Marble Chimnevpicces with Tile Hearths. Chan-
deliers for gas or oil. Decorative Metal Work. China and Stained
Glass. Kitchen Ranges. Steam and Hot Water Heating Apparatus.
Baths and Lavatories. General House Fittings.
140 Leech Brothers and Hoyle, 20 and 22, Old Millgate,
and 8, Cannon-street, Manchester.
Carved Fumed Oak Chimney Piece, with Overmantel fitted with
silver plaque with bevelled edges. Oil Finished Bright Canopied
Interior Dog Stove, with bronzed canopy. Hand-painted Tile Slabs
18 X 36. All-Bright Abbotsford Dog Stove, with brass and bronze
dog pillars. Tile Hearth to suit. Brass and Bronzed Fender Kerb. Set
of Fire Brasses. Pair Brass Dogs. Carved Italian Walnut Chimney-
pieee, with Overmantel complete. Abbotsford Dog Grate, Bronze and
Brass Canopy, Oil Finished Bars, Tile Sides, Bronzed and Brass
Fender Kerb to match. Tile Hearth, set Fire Brasses, pair Dogs to
suit. Decorated Chimneypiece with fluted Pilasters, Overmantel
with shelves finished in cream white. All-brass Sides and Canopied
Grate, Tile Hearth to suit. All-brass Fender Kerb to suit, set Fire
Brasses, pair Brass Dogs. Jenne Lamartine Marble Chimneypiece,
Register Dog Grate with Tile Sides and Bronze Canopy, Bright Bars,
Tile Hearth to ditto. Fender Kerb, set Fire Brasses, pair Brass Dogs.
Ornamental Iron Mantelpieee, with Overmantel, MiiTor, and Brackets,
Register Grate for ditto with plain brown Tiles and Brass Dogs,
Brass and Black Fender Kerb, pair Dogs, set Fire Brasses, Tile
Hearth. Nickel-plated Kitchen Range, Avith one Cast and two Wrought-
iron Ovens, Wrought-iron Fittings, Fall Bar, CroAv, Patent Plate
Rack complete 5ft. 6in. x 5ft., Three-bar Kitchen Fender, niekel plated,
5ft. 6in., Kitchen Mantelpiece to suit. Smoke Jack with fittings. Tile
Hearth. Leamington Range, with two Ovens, Tile Coves, Arch Plate,
Dampers, Nickel-plated Mounts, 5ft. square. Three-bar Kitchen Fender,
Niekel-plated, Kitchen ^Mantelpiece to fit ditto. Copper Stock Pot,
Copper Stew Pan, each Sin. lOin. 12in., Tile Hearth for ditto.
Polished Brass 5-light Chandeliers. Steel, Bronzed, and Relieved
ditto. Ornamental Wrought-iron Chandeliers. Ornamental Wrought-
iron Hall Lamps. Polished Brass ditto. An assortment of Gas
Brackets. An assortment of Table Lamps. Clocks. Bronze Orna-
ments. Brass Candelabra. Wall Sconces. Ink Stands. Fire
Screens. Coal Boxes in brass and wood with mounts.
INDUSTRIAL DESIGN.
61
141 Elliott, Edminson, and Olney, 79, Deansgate,
Manchester.
Combined open and close Fire Kitchen Range, with tile covings,
brass and nickel-plated fittings, &c., 5ft. by 5ft. Close Fire Kitciiener,
with two ovens and railed hot plate, brass fittings, and tiled covings,
4ft. Gin. by 5ft. Open Fire Kitchen Range, with black iron covings,
one sheet iron low and one cast top oven, nickel-plated fittings,
extended plate shelf, &c., 4ft. Gin. by 5ft. Open Fire Kitchen Range,
with oven and hot hearth, extended plate warmer, Ac., nickel-plated
fittings, 4ft. by 4ft. Gin. Rosew^ood Chimneypiece, with Overmantel,
fitted with Silvered Bevilled Mirrors, Ac., Berlin Black and Brass Grate
for ditto, with hand -painted tile slabs. Polished Brass Curb Fender to
match. Mounted Tile Hearth, with art painted centre, fire dogs, brasses,
and stop to match. Old Carved Brown Oak Chimneypiece, with Over-
mantel and Silvered Mirror; pair of Art Painted Tile Sides and Back,
Tile Hearth to match. Berlin Black and Brass Dog Grate, Fender
Curb to match, with rests, brasses, and stop. Brown Brocatella
Marble Chimneypiece, with double Italian griotte marble columns
and black carvings ; Fine Finished Berlin Black and Brass Abbots-
ford Grate, with real bronze panels in curtain, and rich art painted
tile slabs. Art Painted Tile Hearth to match. Curb Fender, with
rests and fire brasses, to match. Statuary Marble Chimneypiece,
with Jaime Larmatine reliefs and moulds, and onyx reliefs ; Engraved
Brass Grate, with art painted tile panels. Art Painted Tile Hearth
to match, fender curb, rests, and brasses to match. Specimen sample
of Roman Marble Mosaic Flooring. Assortment of Grates, with tile
hearths and fenders to match. Marlboro’ Grates, with tiles, to be
seen in operation. National Range, to be seen in operation.
142 S. B. Sutcliffe & Co., Broughton Tile Works, Sher-
borne-street. Strange ways, Manchester.
Wood Chimneypieces, with over-mantels. Tile Fronts for fire-
places. Tile Panels for dog grates. Patent Tile Hearth and Fender
combined, in one piece. Patent Tile Fender Kerbs. Tile Hearths.
Painted Tiles. Dutch Tiles. Specimens of Tiles. Dog Grates.
Interior Grates. Register Grates, shown along ivith Tile Work.
143 Charles Wilson & Sons, Carlton Works, Exeter Place,
Leeds.
Gas Cooking and Heating Stoves. Gas Fires electro-nickelled,
brassed, or bronzed. Greenhouse Boilers, Tailors’ Irons, and Stoves
heated by gas.
144 James Stott & Co., 10, Market Place, Manchester.
Gas Governor. Stop Valve, for prevention of gas explosion.
Smoke Collector for Gas, Oil, and other lights. Lamps, Shades, and
Globes.
145 J. M. Bennett & Sons, Hyde-road, Ardwick, Manchester.
Cast-iron Altar-piece, enamelled in different marbles, with cast-
iron crucifix and candlesticks in electro, brass, and nickel. Cast-iron
62
SECTION I.
High Altar-piece, painted, with cast-iron crucifix and candlesticks
in electro, brass, and bronze. Specimens of Cast Ironwork and
Enamelling.
14G Thomas Sands Hattersley, 2, Centml Buildings,
Oldham-street, Manchester.
Cricket, Lawn Tennis, Football and Lacrosse Goods.
147 Thomas Hepplestone, 25, Shudehill, Manchester.
Guns, Rifles, Revolvers, and Pistols. Fittings and Implements
for guns, rifles, and pistols, and cases for ditto.
148 John Wilson, Jun., Erskine-street, Hulme, Manchester.
Gymnastic Apparatus (fittings and utensils), consisting of
parallel and horizontal bars, jumping stand, trapeze bars, ropes and
rings, apparatus for family use, climbing ropes and poles, Indian
clubs, dumb bells, rings, bar bells, boxing gloves, foils and masks.
149 Henry Whitty, 15, Basnett-street, Liverpool, Lanca-
shire.
Fishing Tackle. Split Cane Rods. Flies and Baits and
Material used m modern fishing. Rackets, Toboggins, La Crosse
and other Canadian games.
150 Giddings and Dacre, Junction Lead, Paint, and Brass
Works, Ducie-street, Whittles Croft, and Mather-
street, London-road, Manchester.
Sanitary Ware and Iron Enamelled Goods. Chandeliers and
Gas Fittings. Bar Fittings. Ornamental Lead Lights. Paints and
Dry Colours. Sheet Lead, Lead Water, and Gas Pipe.
151 Co-operative Wholesale Society Limited; central
office, 1, Balloon-street, Manchester ; works, Duns-lane,
Leicester, and Heckmondwike, Yorkshire.
Boots and Shoes.
152 Merieux and Beaulieu fils (agent, Oswald Pike, 79,
Piccadilly, Manchester), Bos de Moulin, pres Limoges,
France.
Rabbits’ Fur (or Coney Wool) for the making of Felt Hats.
153 James Redfern & Son, 75, Market-street, Manchester;
manufactory, 1, Dantzic-street.
Toilet Brushes and Combs. Household, AVarehouse, and Stable
Brushes and Sponges. Chamois Leathers and Razor Strops.
Miscellaneous Brushware. Shirt Studs, Links, and Solitaires.
Processes of manufacture illustrated.
INDUSTRIAL DESIGN.
63
154 William Holland & Sons, Victoria Mills, Miles Platting,
Manchester.
Wool in its raw state, also scoured, carded, combed, and
prepared for spinning. Combed Botany Yarns, in all counts up to
lOO’s, spun on the French system entirely without oil. Cannettes
for weft. Warp Yarns (for French cashmeres, &c.), single and two-
fold, in cops, on bobbins, and on beams, sized. Cashmere Hosiery
Yarns, in all counts.
155 William Eobertson, Eildon Mill, Galashiels, N.B.
Scotch Tweeds and Rugs.
156 James Barton & Co., Palace Buildings, 93, Market-
street, Manchester.
Travelling Rugs and Mauds.
157 Briggs Priestley & Sons, Albion Mills, Laister
Dyke, and Dole Mills, Thornton, Yorkshire.
Silk and Wool Dress Fabrics for Gentlewomen.
158 Butenberg, Heusch, & Co., Aix-la-Chapelle, Germany.
Pyramid constructed of Berries, made of toilet pins with glass
heads, of different colours. Machine and other Needles.
159 Samuel Porritt & Sons, Bamford Woollen Mills, near
Rochdale.
Flannels, Baizes, Kerseys, Machine Cloths, Plaidings, Tweeds,
Ironing Blankets. Paper Makers’ Felts, Jackets, Water Bagging, Ac.
Printers’ Blanketings, Tapes, Endless Sieves, Lappings, Cotton Manu-
facturers’ Roller, Clearer, Washer, and Sizing Cloth, Flannel, Ac.
Saddlers’ Loin Cloths, Cart Sheetings, Ac.
160 James Carr & Sons, Clarence Mills, Clarence-street,
Chester-road, Manchester.
Patent Woven Ladder Tape and other Tapes and Cords for
Venetian Blinds. Fringed Edgings and Bindings for Curtains and
Tapestries. Worsted and Cotton Bindings for Army and Navy
purposes. Cotton Banding and Washer Cloth for Mill Furnishing.
Other various Bindings and Smallwares for haberdashery purposes.
161 Robert Byrom, Slackcote Mills, Delph, near Manchester.
Fancy Reversible and other Shawls, made from Wool, Vicugna,
and Cashmere.
162 James Barton & Co., Palace Buildings, 93, Market-
street, Manchester.
Woollen Goods.
163 The Lancashire and Yorkshire Productive Society,
Limited, Hare Hill Mills, Hare Hill-road, Littleborougb,
near Manchester.
Flamiels, in Plains and Coloureds. Self and Coloured Lancashires
and Yorkshires, Saxonies, Electorals, Cricketing and Footballing
Flannels, Ac., Arc.
164 Paul Schulze, 19, Greenwood-street, Manchester.
Tlie Home-Knit Oriental (Smyrna) Rug, and the materials
required (Smyrna Wool, Smyrna Cotton, Designs, Arc). Process of
making the same (hand-knitting). Also, Silk Wool Yarns, for
Embroidery and Knitting.
165 John White and Co., The Shetland Warehouse, 10,
F rederick- street, Edinburgh.
Shetland Wool Manuflictures : Lace Shawls, Veils, Scarfs and
Ties, Warm Wrap Shawls, Clouds, Hosiery and Underclothing, all
hand-knitted by the women of Shetland. Specimens of Shetland
Undyed Home-spun Tweeds. Fair Isle Manufactures : Cowls, Caps,
Comforters, Gloves and Stockings, hand-knitted by the natives of Fair
Isle, who were taught the curious patterns and colours by the
survivors of the Spanish Armada Flagship wrecked there in 1588.
166 George Lee & Sons, Limited, Wakefield, and 81, Cannon-
street, Manchester.
Scotch Fingering Wools, Knitting Wools. Specimens of Wool
in the raw state and in process of manufacture.
167 McLintock & Sons, Utilitas Works, Barnsley.
Down Quilts and Clothing, Pillows, Tea Cozies, A:c.
168 Finlayson, Bousfield, & Co., Flax Mills, Johnstone,
Scotland, and Grafton, United States.
Linen Threads, from the rough flax to the finished thread,
including all kinds of linen threads for machine and hand-sewing, and
for domestic use. Macrame, Linen Crochet, Lace, Flourishing Threads,
Salmon Net, and Gilling Twines. Shoe Threads, and all classes of
Threads for the Boot, Saddling, and Leather Trades. Bookbinders’,
Carpet, and Glove Thread. A Ball of Three-cord Sewing Machine
Thread, containing 54,000 yards, or a knotlcss thread 30 miles in
length. Specimens of Flax in the various stages of manufacture.
169 Smith Brothers & Co., 1, Forbes-place, Paisley.
Fine quality of Silk and Wool Shawls, also Figured Velvet
Shawls.
170 Cooper, Corah & Sons, St. Margarets Works, Leicester.
Collection of Ladies’ Jersey Jackets, Girls’ Jersey Costumes,
Boys’ Jerseys, and Jersey Suits, ]\Ien’s Yatchingand Football Jemoys.
Ladies and Gentlemen’s Hosiery. A collection of Fancy Woollen
Hosiery, Underclothing, A:c.
m
INDUSTRIAL DESIGN.
171 Buser and Keiser, Laufenbourg and Liestal, Switzer-
land. Depot and Shipping Office ; E. Buser, 8, York
street, Manchester.
Elastic Knit Ribbed Underclotbiiig in silk, wool, and Lisle.
172 Fleming, Beid k Co., The Merino Mill, Greenock.
Knittine: Machines at work.
Scotch Fingering Yarns.
Double
Knitting and Wheeling Yarns. Berlin Fingering Yarns. Double
Berlin Yarns, and Welsh Wool. Stockings, Socks, Ladies’ Undercloth-
ing, Jerseys, Jersey Suits, Tam-o’-Shanters, Skirts, Tidies, Sofa Rugs,
Shawls, Knee Caps, Gaiters, Gloves, Caps, and all kinds of hand-
knitted Fancy Work.
173 William Stirling k Sons, Glasgow, Dalquhurn, and
Cordale Works, Benton, Dumbartonshire.
Turkey-red Twills, Cambrics, Shirtings, Mulls, Doriahs, Dimities,
Velvets, Lace Curtains, Printed Bed Quilts, Printed Garments, Indian
Dresses, Malay Sarongs, Handkerchiefs, Printed Velvets. Cloth in
various stages of preparation for Turkey-red. Turkey-red Yarns.
Scarlet, Rose, Pink, and Purple Yarns. Yarn in various stages of
preparation for Turkey-red.
174 J. W. Singer k Sons, Art Metal Works, Froine, Somerset.
Art Metal Work, in silver, brass, and iron, for ecclesiastical and
domestic purposes.
175 T. C. Brown-Westhead, Moore, k Co., Cauldon-place,
Staffordshire Potteries.
China and Fine Art Pottery.
17G Joseph Rodgers & Sons, Limited, 6 , Norfolk-street,
Sheffield.
Table Cutlery and Cases. Silver-mounted Carvers. Pocket, Pen,
Sporting, and Pruning Knives. Scissors. Cases of Scissors and
Ladies’ Work Cases. Razors. Cases of Razors and Strops. Daggers,
Hunting, and Sheath Knives, Ac. Electro-plated and Silver Fish
Knives and Carvers. Dessert Knives and Spoons, Forks and Spoons.
Tea and Coffee Services, Trays, Ac., and Electro-plate in every branch
of the trade.
177 The Glass Decoration Co., Limited, 82, Hatton
Garden, London, E.C.
Process of Gilding by Precipitation of Pure Gold on Glass for
friezes, walls, dados, ceilings, facias, mirrors, screens, and other
decorative purposes, embellished with a permanent process of under-
surface painting. Specimens of Patented Frost and Fern Work.
Crystalline Glass, plain, gilded, and silvered for commercial and
domestic uses.
66 SECTION I.
178 William Merchant & Sons, 43, Piccadilly, Manchester.
Straw Plaits, Hats, Bonnets, Leghorns, &c. Ladies’ Felt Hats>
Ostrich and Fancy Feathers, itc.
179 Dr. Salviati & Co., 213, Eegent-street, London.
Venetian Enamel Mosaic for exterior and interior permanent
decoration, and Venetian Blown Glass for table and ornamental
nse. Chandeliers and Brackets for gas, candles, and electric light.
Mirrors, Beads, Stained Glass for windows.
180 Ludwig Moser, Bohemian Glass Manufactory, Carlsbad
and Meistersdorf.
Finest Bohemian Glass, in crystal and coloured glass. Carlsbad
Glass Jewel ware, in enamel and engraved drink services, <tc., &c.
181 Gino Lofiego, 57, Dora Grossa, Turin, Italy.
Majolica and Venetian Glass and painting on China.
182 British and Foreign Bible Society; Manchester
Auxiliary, Beligious Institute, 100, Corporation-street,
Manchester.
Tlie Hoi}' Scriptures, in more than one hundred languages and
dialects ; used in the Colonies and Dependencies of the British Empire
and elsewhere. Translated and printed by the Society.
183 The Ipsen Terra Cotta and Fine Art Pottery (Arup
Bros., Managers), Copenhagen and London, 120, New
Bond-street, W.
Artistic Terra Cotta, Vases, Statuettes and Reliefs.
184 John Bacon & Co., 16, 18, 20, and 22, St. Ann-street,
Manchester.
Devonshire Lace Workers, showing the process of making
Honiton Lace. Collections of Modern Honiton, Flemish, and other
Laces. Specimens of Antique Laces. Artistic designs for Fans.
Collection of modern Fans. Specimens of old Hand-made Hosiery.
Collection of Modern Hosiery. Specimens showing designs and
improvements in Gloves.
185 James and John M. Worrall, Ordsall Dye Works,
Salford.
Samples of Bleached, Dyed, and Printed Cotton Velvets,
Velveteens, Cords, Moleskins, Plush, Twills, Silk Velvet, and Silk
Plush.
188 Horrockses, Miller, & Co., Preston, Lancashire.
Model of Factories
INDUSTRIAL DESIGN.
67
189 The Worcester Royal Porcelain Co., Limited, The
Royal Porcelain Works, Worcester.
Vases, Ewers, Busts, Figures, Statuettes, &c.
190 Manchester Ship Canal Co., Deansgate, Mancliester.
Model representing the Course of the Manchester Shi]) Canal,
and the adjoining country, on a scale of one foot to the mile. The
Canal commences at Eastham, near Liverpool, passing along the
Cheshire side of the Mersey Estuary to Ellesmere Port, the Docks
at Weston Point and Runcorn, and thence to Warrington and
Manchester, where large docks will be constructed. The Canal will
be of the same depth as the Suez Canal, but much wider, so as to
allow two of the largest class of steamers to pass at any part of the
Canal. The Canal will be 35 miles in length, and, near Manchester,
will take in the whole of the waters of the rivers Irwell and Mersey.
191 Royal National Lifeboat Institution, 14, John-
street, London ; Manchester branch, 9, Albert Square.
Models and Drawings of Lifeboats and Specimens of Cork Lifebelts.
Model of Safety Fishing Boat, introduced by the Royal National Lifeboat
Institution. Specimens of the Liquid Boat Compass, as used in the
Lifeboats of the Institution. One of the Models represents a Self-
righting Lifeboat, 37ft. by 8ft., fitted with Water Ballast. This con-
sists of a series of tanks amidships, which can be filled with water or
emptied at will in the space of one minute. The object is to increase
tlie ballast and immersion of the boat, and consequently her draught
of water and stability, when circumstances admit of so doing without
materially increasing her fixed w'eight for land carriage or her draught
of water when launching or in very shallow water. The water is
kept as nearly amidships as possible in the boat, and the tanks are
separate, so that one or more may be filled as the case may require.
There is also a Model of a Self-righting Lifeboat, 39ft. by 9ft., fitted
with a Sliding Keel, which materially increases her stability and
Weatherly qualities whilst in deep water without sacrificing the fiat
floor and light draught so necessary when in shallow water. The
sliding keel can either be lowered to its full extent at both ends, or it
can be triced up at either end or put in any desired position. [N.B.
see also the Lifeboat and Carriage, Stand 684, in the grounds east of
]\Iachinery Annexe.]
192 John Crook and Sons, Pleasure Boat Inn, Ribble Side,
Preston.
Double Sculling Skiff, built of cedar, with gratings fore and aft ;
Brampton’s patent rudder hangings, complete, with oars, skulls,
boathook, &c. Double Fowling Punt, with centre board, with all
fittings complete, including Holland’s breechloading swivel gun.
Model Double Fowling Punt, scale 3 inches to the foot.
193 Inman and International Steamship Co., Limited
(Richardson, Spence, & Co), Tower Buildings, Water-
street, Liverpool.
A Model in case of the R.M.S. City of Chicago.
i
68
SECTION T.
194 The Manx Line, The Isle of Man, Liverpool, and
Manchester Steamship Co., Limited, 3a, Brunswick-
street, Liverpool, and Douglas, Isle of Man.
Model of The Manx Line Steamship Queen Victoria, built
by William Pearce, Fairfield Works, Glasgow. Speed, 21 knots.
Dimensions: Length, 330ft. ; breadth, 40ft.; depth, 16ft. Engines,
I.H.P. 6,500.
195 Cayzer, Irvine, k Co., 109, Hope-street, Glasgow;
40, Chapel-street, Liverpool ; Leadenhall Buildings,
London ; 4, Albert Square, Manchester.
Model of Vessel, Clan Macarthur. Material, steel. Description,
schooner; tonnage, 3,984; dimensions in feet, length 381,
breadth 43, depth 27; I.H.P., 2,376 ; engines inverted direct-
acting compound cylinders, 48in. and 86in ; stroke, 60in ; boilers, 2;
furnaces, 1 2 corrugated ; builders and designers, Scott and Co.;
year when built, 1883; owners, exhibitors; trade, Indian.
195a Hughes k Young, 75, Thomas-street, Manchester.
State Umbrella for Alikaleh Dow^dah, King of the Moriah
Country, West Coast of Africa.
195b Doulton k Co., 17, Deansgate, Manchester.
Glazed Terra Cotta Fountain.
195c Eichard Johnson, Clapham & Morris, 24 and 26 Lever-
street, Manchester.
Wire Lathing Cottage, constructed wdth fireproof wire lathing,
and iron and ware fireproof cavity partition Avails. Paper Machine
Wires ; Dandy Roll, Backing AVire, and AVasher AA'ire, for paper
manufacturers. Trophy of Brass, Copper, Steel, and Lead AAdre Cloth,
10 to 120 mesh per scpiare inch, for \a\rious purposes. Trophy of
Iron, Steel, and Copper Alachine AA’^ovcii AA^ire, for mines, maltkilns,
&c. Flattened Steel AA’^ire Cloth for mines, maltkilns, Ac. Trophy
of AA’^ire Sash, Clock and Picture Cords. Trophy of Brass, Tin, Black
and Fancy Boot Lace, and other Tags. Alodels of Flat and Revolving
AVire Colliery Screens. Miners’ Safety Lamps, Deflector, Mueseler,
Johnson’s, Improved Marsaut, and other patterns. Electric Miner’s
Lamp, IIoAvat’s patent. Patent Lamp Trimmer’s Friend, and Lamp
Table. Aliner’s Shovel and BaiTOAv Trundle, found in some ancient
Avorkings for coal near Great Harwood. Two Phosphor Bronze Pro-
pellers for Launch and Torpedo Boat. Finished Propeller Bolt. Mill
Bearing and Slide A^alve, both Avorn. One Pump Rod, finished.
Phosphor Bronze Ingots, part polished to show colour. Phosphor
Bronze Tubes, Rods, Shoots, Ac. Steam Fittings, and other finished
specimens of Phosphor Bronze AAdrc Rope, Patent Silicium Bronze
Telephone and Telegraph AVire.
INDUSTRIAL DESIGN.
69
196 John Mallabone, 29, Leonard-street, Finsbury, London,
E.C.
Adjustable Folding Chair. Box Ottoman Settee.
197 J. Harrington & Co., Cradle Spring and Tube Cbime
Works, Coventry.
Cradle Springs for Chairs and Carriages. Tube Chimes for
Village Churches, Public Buildings, Clocks, Domestic Gongs, Electric
Calls, &c.
198 C. J. Mudie, 9, Mount Pleasant, Liverpool; 17, Picca-
dilly, Manchester.
Ostrich Feathers. Aigrettes. Fans. Mantures and Garnitures.
199 Percival, Vickers, & Co., Limited, Jersey-street,
Manchester.
Vases, Engraved Bottles, Ac. Sets of Cut Table Glass, as
vines, tumblers, basins, dishes, compotes, decanters, claret jugs,
water jugs, flower stands, sugars, celeries, and other useful and
artistic articles ; also Press Glass of like nature.
200 Stevens and Williams, Brierley Hill Glass Works,
near Stourbridge.
A Collection of Art Glass Ware, comprising cameo glass, gold
decorated glass, rock crystal, cut and engraved glass, and specimens
of advanced glass making in colours, Ac.
201 Association of Carlsbad Glass Manufacturers,
Carlsbad, Bohemia.
Bohemian Glass, speciality of New Persian Decoration.
202 Erlaucht Graf von Harrach’sche Glasfabrik (Count
Harrach’s Glassworks), Neuwelt, Bohemia, Austria.
Flint, Crystal, engraved Coloured Bohemian and Venetian
Glassware, in Table, Ornamental Gas, Kerosene and Electric Goods,
Paintings on Glass and China.
203 Procter & Co., 428, Oxford-street, London, W.
Indian Gold, Gem, Enamelled and Silver Jewellery. Carved
Furniture, Carpets and Rugs, Silk and Cotton Hangings, Gold and I
Embroidered Hangings, Table Covers, Ac., Mirror Foulcarries, Arms,
Metal Work, Gold and Steel, Silver and Copper, Silver and Iron,
Carved and Inlaid Boxes, Decorative Pottery, Carved Ivories.
204 Kensington School of Art Embroidery, High-street,
Kensington, London, W., and Belgrave Mansions,
London, S.W.
Assortment of Ecclesiastical and Domestic Needlework, Rugs,
Ac., made by the Patent Home Carpet, Rug, and Mat Machine.
70
SECTION I.
205 John and Richard Sheldon, Leek, Statfordshire.
Silk and Mohair Braids for Military, Gentlemen’s, and Ladies’
Wear.
206 Anthony Ward k Co., Albion Mills, Leek, Staffordshire.
Braids of Mohair and Silk Mixed with Mohair, suitable for Mili-
tary, Clothiers, Clothing Manufacturers, Ac. Laces of Silk, Mohair,
and Cotton.
207 Richard John Turk, Thames Side, Kingston-on-Thames.
Canadian Canoe, our own build, in cedar, with American elm
timbers, paddles, plush cushions, Ac.
208 The Lancashire Felt Co., Limited, Denton, near
Manchester
Australian Sheep’s Wool in the Grease. Australian Sheep’s
Wool AVashed. Australian Sheep’s AVool AA^ashed and Carded.
Felts made from same for hatting purposes. English Rabbit Fur
and Felts made from same for hatting purposes, Ac.
200 John Cheetham k Sons, Kingston Hat Works, Hyde,
near Manchester.
Felt Hats for home and exportation.
210 Nathaniel Jacobson, Clarence Hat Works, Dutton-
street, Cheetham, Manchester.
Tweed Hats, Caps, and Helmets. Historical Sketches of Head
Coverings from before the Roman Conquest down to early part of
Nineteenth Century.
211 Samuel Mills, Yauxhall Hat Works, Rochdale-road,
Manchester.
Silk Hats, Pullovers, Felts, Merinoes, Helmets, Hunting Caps,
Opera Hats, Liveries, and Storm Hats.
212 Titancrete Company, 8, Deansgate, Manchester,
Fire-proof Flooring for mills, Ac. Columns for mills. Girder,
Shutter-Steps. Props for Collieries. Doors for mills, warehouses,
Ac. Tanks and Baths for domestic purposes.
213 VvE. Mercier Leclerc, 19, Rue de Berulle St. Maude,
Paris.
Needles and Needle Cases.
214 Thomas Briggs, 21, Mavor-street, Manchester; factories,
2 and 4, Southgate-road, London, N. ; Richmond Hill
Works, Salford ; Springfield Works, Salford ; Globe
Twine Mills, Leeds; Barrow Flax and Jute Works,
Barrow-in-F urness.
Jute Yarns and Jute Fabrics. Hemp and Jute Twines and Cords.
AA aterjiroof Fabrics, for lining bales and cases of goods for shipment.
INDUSTRIAL DESIGN.
71
Brattice Cloth and Wagon Covers. Floor Oil Cloths. Printed
Jute Rugs.
215 Hanson, Scott, & Co., Croft Flax Mills and Rope AVorks,
Stockport.
Cotton Driving Belts and Mill Bandings. Ropes, Cordage,
Twines. Grey, White, and Coloured Cotton.
216 Post Office.
216a Her Majesty’s Postmaster-General.
Telegraphic Apparatus used by the various Telegraph Com-
panies prior to the acquisition of the telegraphs by the Government
in 1870. Also the modern apparatus now in general use by the
post office, and specimens of Submarine Cables.
217 Lancashire AND Cheshire Telephonic Exchange Co.,
Limited.
Public Telephone Call Office and Switeh-room.
218 John Heywood, Deansgate and Ridgefield, Manchester.
218a London and County Photographic Company, 63,
St. Paul’s Churchyard, London.
Photographs.
219 George Faulkner Armitage, Stamford House,
Altrincham.
An Entrance Hall furnished in carved oak, with a staircase.
A Living-room in dark mahogany, with wall panelling and a modelled
frieze decorated, rich silk curtains, wrought silver electric-light fittings.
Sitting-room on first floor. A balcony furnished with antiquities and
curiosities.
220 Neville Clegg, Oldfield Brow, Altrincham.
Type of ordinary Artisan’s Living Room, Bedroom, and Parlour,
suitable for persons of limited means, from designs by Mr. G. F.
Armitage, of Altrincham. The Furniture made by A. W. Simpson,
Kendal ; the Kitchen Range and Utensils, by J. M. Leigh and Sons,
Deansgate, Manchester ; Kitchen Floor, laid by W m. Clapham,
Bramhall Park, Stockport; Kitchen Sink, to permit of washing clothes,
by Doultoii & Co., Lambeth ; Parlour Stove, by ditto.
Precious Stones, Agates and Minerals. This collection is
believed to contain the natural crystals and cut and facetted specimens
of every known precious stone. It also contains a large number of
Official Catalogue and Guides.
221 S. Learoyd, Huddersfield.
*^S<%’
SECTION 1.
semi-precious stones, aud of interesting and attractive minerals.
Hie entire series has been brought together and aminged by Samuel
Learoyd, Esq., F.G.S., of Sherwood House, Huddersfield, to whom
any inquiries may be directed by visitors and collectors interested in
the specimens. Tlie cases include contributions kindly lent from the
cabinets of the Baroness Burdett-Coutts, of Holly Lodge, Highgate ;
Colonel llimmington, Lynton House, Upper Norwood; Professor
Church, M.A., Professor of Chemistry at the Boyal Academy ; Mr
Samuel Learoyd, F.G.S., Huddersfield ; and Mr J. R. Gregory, of 88,
Charlotte-street, Fitzroy Square, London. The collection of the
Baroness Burdett-Coutts includes — (1) A large and valuable series of
cut and polished agates. (2) An interesting collection of various
forms of jasper. (3) Crystals of emerald. (4) Crystals of aqua-
marine. (5) Crystals of tourmaline. (6) Crystals of Thur of veiy rich
colour. Professor Church’s collection consists of 300 gem stones,
mounted as rings, many of them of gveat rarity and excellence,
including various specimens of the following gems ; Sapphire, ruby,
spinel, turquoise, topaz, tourmaline, garnet, peridot, emerald,
aquamarine, chrysoberyl, phenakite, zircon or jargoon, spodumene,
opal, amethyst, eolite, moonstone, crocidolite and labradorite.
Colonel Rimmington’s collection contains very choice and valuable
specimens of the following precious stones, crystals, and minerals, as
found, and cut and facetted as gems — diamonds and sapphires
of all colours, rubies, spinel ruby, chrysoberyls, cat’s-eyes,
alexandrites, topazes of all colours, tourmalines, rubelites, zircons,
opals in great variety, andalusite, peridot, essonites, garnets,
including the rare green stones, amethysts, moonstones,
beryls, phenakite, idocrase, quartz in various forms
with various enclosures, chrysoprares, orthoclare, adularia, dioptare,
amazon stone, cotterite, jasper, agates, labradorite, sunstone,
lapis lazuli, hypersthene, microcline, amber, &c. Mr. Samuel Lea-
royd’s collection includes a series of Indian Mocha stones, consisting
of crystals of manganese in translucent chalcedony. A collection or
modern onyx cameos, in which is included a number of shell cameos.
In several of these specimens the artist has, in cutting the cameo from
one solid piece of stone or shell, availed himself of three different
layers of colour, and has thus jiroduced complexion and other effects,
no artificial colour being used. A varied collection of tourmalines
in the natural crystals from different parts of the world.
A series of specimens of labradorite, also of fibrous quartz and
brocidolite, showing a brilliant play of varied colours. A collection
showing the various forms and colours of quartz in the natural and
cut state, including pure rock crystal, cairngorms, amethysts,
chrysopraus, Ac. Collections of Indian, American, Scottish, and
English agates. An interesting series of Cumberland and Cornish
minerals. Mr. Gregory’s collection contains gems and precious
stones, exhibiting nearly all the varieties of colour aud the general
character of each stone, including many newly-introduced gems,
some of extreme rarity and beauty, and other stones and minerals
adapted for ornamental purposes ; also a collection of 24 examples ot
imitation precious stones, showing the most typical colour and usual
INDUSTRIAL DESIGN.
73
mode of cutting each stone. Also a series of 24 models of the large
historical and other diamonds, of which the following are the detailed
particulars: (1) The Stewart (weight 288| carats), found in 1873,
at Waldek’s Plant, Vaal River, South Africa; uncut. (2) The Great
Nizam (weight 440 carats), supposed to have been destroyed during
the Indian Mutiny in 1857-8. Native cut. A plaster cast of this
stone was forwarded to the British Museum by an English officer.
(3) The Star of the South (weight 254J carats), found by a
negress in 1853, at Bogagem, in the ])rovince of Minas Geraes,
Brazil. Uncut. (4) The Tuscan. (5) The Mattam, found in
1760 at Lavidak, Borneo. Belongs to the Rajah of Mattam
in Borneo. (Weight 367 carats.) (6) The Regent, or Pitt. Bought
for £135,000. Belongs to France. (Weight I36J carats.) (7) The
Great Mogul (weight 279 carats.) (8) The Kohinoor. Before re-
cutting presented to Queen Victoria by the East India Company.
(Weight I86yV carats.) (9) The Kohinoor recut. (Weight 102^|-
carats.) (10) The Star of the South after cutting (weight 125
carats.) (11) The Orloft. Belongs to Russia, formerly in the eye
of an idol in India. (Weight 194J carats.) (12) Mr. DreszdeiPs
Drop, the property of the Guicowar of Baroda. (Weight 76 J carats.)
(13) The Florentine. Belongs to Austria. (Weight 139|- carats.)
(14) The Nassuc. The property of the Duke of Westminster. Was
sold by auction in 1820 for £7,200. (Weight 89| carats.) (15)
The Star of South Africa, found in 1869; the property of the
Countess of Dudley. (Weight 46 J carats.) (16) The Pigott. Sold
by lottery early in this century. Belongs to Egypt. (Weight 82^
carats.) (17) The Shah. Belongs to Russia. (Weight 86 carats.)
(18) Mr. Hope’s Blue Diamond. The property of the Duchess of
Newcastle. (Weight 44^ carats.) (19) The Jehan Ghir Shah.
This stone is engraved with two monograms. (Weight 1 1 5y\ carats. )
(20) The Polar Star. Belongs to Russia. (Weight 40 J carats.)
(21) The Green Diamond. In the green vaults at Dresden. (Weight
48|^ carats.) (22) The Eugenie. Purchased by the Emperor
Napoleon III. (Weight 51 carats.) (23) The Saucy. Formerly
belonged to Prince Demidoff. (Weight 53J carats.) (24)
The Cumberland. Presented to the Duke of Cumberland by
the City of London. (Weight 32 carats.) Names and de-
scriptive labels will be placed upon the several specimens.
The following notes are added with a view of interesting those
who are not familiar with the minerals. The diamond consists
of pure carbon crystallised. It is the hardest known stone, but is
readily cleaved. Diamonds are found of all colours, brown, gTeen,
blue, &c., though the diamond of commerce is usually colourless. It
has the purest lustre of any known stone. The sapphire, ruby.
Oriental amethyst, and Oriental topaz are the same mineral with
varying natural colours. They consist of crystallised alumina, or
clay. The tint of the ruby is due to peroxide of iron, and that of
the sapphire to protoxide. The star in the star rubies and sapphires
is due to the structure of the crystal. The best Oriental sapphires
retain their colour by gas light, whereas the less valuable become
dark and dull. Sapphires are found of all colours, and several white.
74
SECTION I.
yellow, gi'eeii, and gi'cy sapphires will be found in the collection.
The turcjuoise derives its name from the country through which it
was imported. It is translucent. It often becomes green by age.
The rich colour is due to copper and iron oxides. The emerald,
beryl and aquamarine, are the same stone of varying depths of
colour. The garnet includes essonite, cinnamon stone, alamindine,
carbuncle, pyrope, and green garnet. The opal is a variety of
silica. It is a colourless stone, the rich play of light being due to
fractures and fissures in the stone. Quartz includes the amethyst,
which is naturally coloured by manganese, chrysoprase coloured by
nickel, rose quartz coloured by titanium, cairngorm coloured by
oxide of iron, and pure rock crystal. Agates consist of alternating
la}’ers of differently coloured chalcedony. The different forms of
agate are known as fortification, ribbon, zoned, brecciated, moss,
rye, variegated and Mocha stones. Jasper consists of opaque
chalcedony variously coloured.
222 H. Scott Richmond & Co., 30 and 31, Paternoster
Square, and 13, Rose-street, London, E.C. ; 127, Fifth
Avenue, New York ; Temple Court, Collins-st. West,
Melbourne ; 1747, Notre Dame-st., Montreal, Canada.
Wall Papers, Silks, Brocatelles, Brocades, Printed Stufis, Muslin®,
Velvets, and other fabrics for house-furnishing and decoration.
223 Storey Bros. & Co., White Cross Mill, Lancaster.
Tectorium. A sanitary and washable wall decoration in oil
colours upon cloth. Queen’s Leather. A new waterproof and grease-
proof imitation of leather, and substitute for rubber cloth, for the
upholstery, bookbinding, and shoe trades, and for other purposes.
Anaglypta. A modelled decorative fabric in solid and semi-solid
relief, for wall, ceiling, and other decorative purposes.
224 Joseph Hunter k Co., 20, 16, and 12, St. Mary’s
Parsonage, Manchester.
Library, Study, and Office Furniture, Secretaire Bookcases,
Registered and Cylinder Writing Tables, Cabinet Washstands, Ac.
English, American, and Austrian Chairs. Two (hand-worked)
Needlework Screens.
225 Century Guild of Artists. Mackmurdo and Horne,
architects, 28, Southampton-street, W.C., London ;
Goodall k Co., agents and manufacturers, 15, King-
street, Manchester.
Drawing Room, including Furniture, Sculpture, Painting,
Carpets, and Fabrics, designed by the Century Guild of Artists, and
executed by its Agents, Messrs. Goodall A Co., 15, King-street,
Manchester.
l
INDUSTRLVL DESIGN.
75
226 E. Good ALL & Co., 15, King-street, Manchester.
Suite of F urnished and Decorated Rooms. Oii ground flo(jr :
Entrance hall, drawing room, boudoir or writing-room, dining-room.
On first floor : Landing ; bedroom, furnished in mahogany. The
draperies for this room are designed and executed by the Royal
School of Art Needlework, South Kensington. Small bedroom,
furnished in Circassian ash. The draperies for this room are also
designed and executed by the Royal School of Art Needlework, Soutli
Kensington.
227 W. AND J. S. CoLLiNGE, 110, St. Jamcs-strect, Burnley.
Pollard Oak Dining Room, in the Modern Renaissance style.
Sideboard, with break front, the pedestals enclosed by richly
moulded and carved doors, bevelled glass in back, with ornamental
cupboards at sides, and a moulded and carved pediment. Massive
Mantelpiece, with turned and carved columns and overmantel to
match, and all accessories. Fender, Hearth, Ac. Telescope Dining
Table. Window Table. Couch and Chairs. Carpet and Hearthrug.
Window Curtains and Pole. Pollard Oak Hat and Umbrella Stand.
Bedroom Suite, in walnut, with figured Italian walnut panels and
carved reliefs, in the Modern Renaissance style. Wardrobe, with
large bevel mirrors at sides, drawers in centre, with projecting
cupboard over. Pedestal Dressing Table, fitted with drawers,
cupboards, and bevel mirror. Washstand, with tiles in back.
Suitable Mantel ami Glass, with all accessories. Fender, Hearth, &c.
Persian Bedstead, with carved panels, moulded and carved cornice,
movable brackets for curtains, upholstered complete. Chairs,
Towel Rail. Table Pedestal Cupboard. Carpet and Hearthrug.
Curtains and Pole. Lounge Chair. Ottoman Seat.
229 Charlotte Robinson, 64, King-street, Manchester.
Frieze. Corner Sideboard. Overmantel. Draught Screen.
Fire Screens. Tuckaway Tables. Newspaper and Music Stands.
Photograph Frames, &c.
230 Reuben Bennett, 53, South King-street ; works. East-
street, Manchester. London address, 18, Bouverie-
street, E.C.
Samples of Decorative Modelling of Walls and Ceilings by
Handwork, as opposed to embossed surfaces produced by mechanical
means. By this hand-work process the wall or ceiling itself is
modelled by the artist’s own hand.
231 and 232 J. Davenport & Co., 6, John Dalton-street,
Manchester.
Artistic and Sanitary Wall Papers and Decorations : — Raised
Flocks for painting, Cordelova, Japanese Leather Papers, Highly
Embossed English Leather Papers, Ceiling Papers, Staircase
Decorations, Nursery Papers by Walter Crane, Room Mouldings, &c.
if
. 11 ?
m
m
!3jr
76
SECTION I.
233 Thonet Brothers, Vienna. Bepresented by Messrs. B.
Hembry & Co., 47, Cross-street, Albert Square,
Manchester; and 33, North John-street, Liveiq^ool.
Austrian Bentwood Furniture.
234 Watson Smith, Lecturer in Chemical Technology in the
Victoria University, Manchester.
Autograph Manuscript Scores, and Letters of the Classical
Musical Composers, more especially of those of the older school.
235 William Mitchell & Son, 265, Stretford-road, Hulme,
Manchester.
Interior Decorative Painting. New Method of Painting. Special
Friezes, and other Hand-painted Decorations.
236 Turner and Co., 36, John Dalton-street, Manchester.
Sideboard, English oak, style Italian, 1 6th century, panels carved
in high relief, genre grotesque. Mantel and Overmantel (en suite).
The mantel fitted with tilting receptacle for coals. Lounge Chairs
mounted on cradle springs. Writing Table.
237 Doveston’s, 3 and 4, Albert Square, Manchester.
Small House, consisting of four rooms, viz., hall, dining-room,
and two bed-rooms, furnished with carpets, draperies, ornaments, Ac.,
complete, being reproductions of fine inlaid and carved work, prin-
cipally in the styles of the 17th and 18th centuries.
238 Arthur H. Lee, German Mill, Derby-sti-eet, Bolton.
Curtain Fabrics, Furniture Covering, and Wall Hangings,
Tapestry, Damask, Ac.
239 Arthur Brunel Chat wood, Irwell House, Prestwich.
Chatwood’s Electro-pneumatic Action for Organs. Illustrated
by a Working Model, showing the invention applied \o (a) the key
action ; (1)) tlie stop action (c) the action of the swell pedal; (d)
the action of the couplers ; (e) a special composition pedal action.
240 Alb^red Shepherd, Straduarius Works, Mill-lane End,
Brighouse, Yorkshire.
Violins, hand-made. Made from yew tree 1,500 years old.
241 William Hargreaves, 11, Booth-street, Piccadilly,
Manchester.
Joseph Guarini Violins. Joseph Guarini Viola. Joseph Guarini
Violoncello. Quartette by Joseph Guarini. Violin in parts,
showing the interior, the bass bar, Ac. J. Guarini Violin Bows.
5
i
INDUSTRIAL DESIGN.
77
242 G. A. Chanot, 48, Great Ducie-street, Manchester.
Violoncello, copy of a very fine specimen of Stradivarius.
Violins, copies of Maggini and Joseph Guarnerius. Samples of Bows,
old and new ; all kinds of Strings and Fittings for Violinists. A few
Specimens of old Violins and Violin Cases.
243 Edward Crompton, 54, Barton Arcade, Deansgate,
Manchester.
Violins by George Craske. Models of Straduarius and Guarnerius.
244 Arthur Tilley & Co., 29 and 30, Westfield -road,
Surbiton, and 35a, Piccadilly, W.
Banjos, in ebonised glass case.
245 George Potter & Co., Aldershot.
Patented Invention for Tuning Drums (Timpani aud Gong).
Models of Bass, Side, Tenor, and Kettle Drums. Cymbals. A
Historic Drum (relic of Waterloo).
246 David Murray, 10, King-street, Manchester.
Drawing-room Furniture, Papers, Decorations, &c.
247 Heigh WAY & Son, 19, John Dalton -street, Manchester,
and 8, Berners-street, London.
Portion of Entrance Hall, showing corner fireplace, oak panelling
and decoration, with drapery, carpet, and ornaments. Drawing-room,
decorated and furnished, with ceiling and frieze in modelled plaster.
248 Orme and Sons, Blackfriars-street, Manchester.
Black Walnut Billiard Table, with richly carved panels. Black
Walnut Door, covering recess for Cues, &c. An Oak Mantel and
Marking Board combined, fitted with register grate, hearth, and
fender. The Marking Board is fitted with ball boxes, mirrors, &c.
Cabinet and Marking Board combined, in fumigated oak. Envelope
Card Table, in black walnut. Revolving Cue Rack. Billiard Room
Chairs. Billiard Room Lounge, upholstered in white horsehair, with
fancy pattern w'orked in. Set of Turkey Carpet Surrounds, and
other billiard room appointments.
249 George Baker, Sevastopoulo Khan, Constantinople ;
London Depot, 19, Ivy-lane, Newgate-street, London.
Turkey Carpets, Persian Carpets, Rugs, Ac., in all styles. Cotton
and Silk Textile Fabrics from Turkey, Persia, India, and China.
250 Wm. Scott Morton (for the Tynecastle Company), Tyne-
castle, Edinburgh ; 14, Bathbone Place, London, W.
Tynecastle Canvas for the decoration of walls, ceilings, Ac.
i
250a J. & H. Patteson, Oxford-street, Manchester.
Marble ^Mosaic Adamant, for floors, walls, fire-hearths, ttc.
English and Foreign Encaustic and Geometrical Tiles. Roman,
Ceramic, and Enamel Mosaics.
251 Jeffrey k Co., 64, Essex-road, London, N.
■Wall Papers (hand and machine ]a’inted). Embossed Leathers
and Leather Papers, and Embossed Satins, Decorations for rooms
and staircases, including the Royal Jubilee Decoration by
F. Vincent Hart ; the AVoodnotes and Golden Age by AValter Crane ;
the Elyas by Lewis F. Day ; and the AVestminster by J. D.
Sedding. Examples of Papers stamped in low relief. Raised Flocks
for painting, and Flocks and Golds. Inexpensiye machine-printed
Nursery and Chintz Papers, and Jeffi’e}’ and Co.’s Patent Hygienic
AA'all Papers, all free from arsenic.
252 James Lamb, 16, John Dalton-street, Manchester.
Furniture and Decoration.
253 The Decorators’ Supply Co. (S. Heighway, proprietor),
105, Deansgate, Manchester.
Japanese Leather Embossed AA'all Paper, Lincrusta AA^alton,
Miiraline, Duro-Textile, and sundry new embossed materials. Selec-
tion of Paperhangings.
254 Kendal Milne & Co., Deansgate, Police-street, and St.
Ann-street ; manufactory, Southgate, Manchester.
Drawing-room : For gentleman’s town or country residence,
decorated and furnished. Satinwood dado wall and ceiling framing,
witli panels of figured silk, the furniture in rosewood with delicately
engrayed inlays in tlie style of the Italian Renaissance. Dining-
room : Oak wall panelling carved and inlaid, the frieze of bold
repousse work in copper. Mahogany sideboard, chimney piece, grate,
&c. A dining-room, drawing-room, and bedroom completely decorated
and furnished for a house of £40 annual rental. A workman’s dwelling
house, comprising kitchen, sitting-room, ])arlour, and bedrooms,
completely furnished. The furniture is entiivl}' made of hard woods,
such as oak, birch, ash, and elm. Suitalde for a rental of 6s. or 7s.
per week. Specimens of various articles used in decorating and
furnishing public and private buildings. A gentleman’s house
completely decorated and furnished, showing tlie application of
electric light to domestic purposes. See the Pldison Electric Light
Company’s PIxhibit in the Botanical Gardens, between the band
stands.
255 Robert Garnett & Sons, works, Penketli ; warerooms,
Sankey -street, W arriugton.
Bedroom furnishing, combining constructional effect with
economy of space. Also dining-room examples, including Ingle Nook
Fireplace, applicable to ordinary rooms.
INDUSTRIAL DESIGN.
79
256 F. AND C. OsLER, Broad-street, Birmingham, and 100,
Oxford-street, London.
Crystal Glass for the table. Ornamental Glass of all kinds.
China Services for the table. Decorative China. Chandeliers.
Electric Fittings.
257 Morris & Co., 449, Oxford-street, London, W. ; works,
Merton Abbey, Surrey ; Manchester agents, Kendal
Milne, & Co.
Arras Tapestry. Hand-made Carpets. Brussels and Wilton
Carpets. Wall Papers. Printed Furniture Cottons. Curtain
Materials. Silk Damasks. Cabinet Work. Embroideries.
258 Doulton & Co., London, Burslem, Bowley Begis, St.
Helens, Smethwick, Liverpool, Manchester, Birmingham,
and Paris.
Art Exhibits : Specimens of Doulton Ware, Lambeth Faience,
Silicon Ware, Chine Ware, and other Art Wares, from the Lambeth
Art Pottery. A Large Terra Cotta Panel, b}^ Mr. George Tinworth,
entitled “Christ’s Entry into Jerusalem.” • In the Art Section, Large
Terra Cotta Panel, by Mr. George Tinworth, entitled “ The Release
of Barabbas.” On either side of the Organ, Two Panels, representing
“ Music,” painted in Doulton’s new Impasto process. In the Nave,
a Tank Fountain, 20 feet diameter, in glazed temi cotta in the
Indian style ; the floor of the tank is also of keramic material. A
Large Fountain Rim, 20 feet diameter, of hexafoil plan, with pedestals
and vases all of glazed terra cotta.
259 The Worcester Boyal Porcelain Co., Limited, The
Boyal Porcelain Works, Worcester.
Miniature Bust, on pedestal, of Her Majesty the Queen. A
variety of Vases, Ewers, and other forms and ornaments in Oriental
Renaissance — Indian, Persian, Arabian — in ivory, porcelain, richly
decorated with various metals, encrusted golds, and colours. Vases,
Tazzas, and Patera, in Italian Renaissance. Vases in ivory porcelain,
with painted flowers. Figures and Statuettes, in stained ivories and
old ivory. Vases in Cloisonne decorations. Carved Ivory Porcelain.
Specimens of China Dinner, Dessert, Tea, and Breakfast Services.
Royal Worcester Vitreous Dinner Services, and other useful Wares.
260 Ernest Wahliss, 37, Kaemtner-strasse, Vienna, Austria,
and 1 1, St. Andrew’s-street, Holborn Circus, London,E.C.
Hungarian Faience, consisting of Vases, Ornaments, Lamps,
Jugs, Flower Pots, Mounted Knives and Forks, Toilet and Dinner Sets,
Breakfast Sets, Tra}’'s, Salad Bowls, &c. Bohemian China, consisting
of Vases, Flower Holders, Ornaments, Looking Glasses, Jugs, Plates,
Dishes, Cups and Saucers, Flower Pots, Knives and Forks, Salad
80
SECTION I
Bowls, Jam and Biscuit Boxes, Toilet Sets, Baskets, Trays, <tc.
Bohemian Earthenware, consisting of Terra Cotta Figures, Busts,
Groups, Flower Holders, Vases, Ornaments, Liqueur Sets, ifec.
2G1 Haviland & Co., GO, Fcaubourg Poissoniere, Paris;
works, Limoges.
Painted China and Artistic Earthenware Vases and Ornaments.
2G2 Thomas Hayward & Co., Deansgate China Rooms,
Manchester.
Artistic Pottery, the special productions of Messrs. Doiilton and
Co.’s Burslem Works, including Vases, Art Pitchers, in patented
Chine decoration ; also artistic Tea, Toilet, Dessert, and Dinner
Services. Minton’s productions — Japanesque China Dessert Service.
Classical designs in Dinner, Toilet, and Breakfast Services. Vases in
pat-sur-pat decoration, by their ceramic artists, Solon & Co.
2G3 Guiseppe Guetta, Barbarigo s Palace, Venice.
Artistic Furniture in carved wood. Artistic Figures. Venetian
Mirrors and Glassware.
2G4 Adolfe Bauer e Antonibere. Bauer, 5, Piazza Fresco-
baldi, Florence ; Antonibere, Nove Provincia, Venezia.
Artistic Furniture. Artistic China.
2G5 Boosey & Co., 21)5, Regent-street, London.
Orchestral and Military Wind and Percussion Band Instruments.
2G7 Forsyth Brothers, 122, 124, Deansgate, Manchester;
272a, Regent Circus, Oxford-street, London.
Metal-framed Grands and Cottage Pianofortes, by Collard and
Collard, London. American Organs by Tlie Dominion Organ Company,
Bowmanville, Canada.
2G9 Neufeld L., Kronen-strasse, Berlin.
Boudoir Grand, entire metal frame, repeating action ; over-
strung scaling. Upright Grand, cupola metal frame, Louis XIV. case,
overstrung scaling. Upright, ebonised and gold case, overstrung
scaling. Small Cottage, iron framing in walnut case, overstrung
scaling. Music Chair and Stool.
270 Pleyel Wolff, & Co., Rue Rochechouart, Paris; London
Agency, 170, New Bond-street.
Semi-grand Piano, parallel strings, in mahogany and mar-
queterie case. Upright Piano, with oblique stringing, mahogany and
marqueterie case, style Louis XVI. Patent Transpositeur. Cottage
Piano, rosewood case, vertical stringing, style Louis XVI.
INDUSTRIAL DESIGN. 81
271 Watson Smith, Lecturer in Chemical Technology in the
Victoria University, Manchester.
The last Piano of Beethoven, specially made for him by Conrad
Graf, of Vienna {vide Graf’s autograph letter, kindly lent by Messrs.
Gebriider Hug, of Zurich). Chopin’s last and favourite Piano,
presented to him by Camille Pleyel, of Paris (see inscribed plate on
piano, kindly lent by Messrs. Pleyel, Wolff, & Co., of Paris).
Autograph, Scores, and Letters, &c., by the Great Masters of Musical
Composition, in six frames, Cherubini, Schumann, Chopin, Mendelssohn,
Thomas, David, Gounod, Weber, Meyerbeer, Rossini, J. and C. Pleyel,
tkc. y also of Boccherini, Haydn, Bach, Berlioz, Spontini, Beethoven,
Mozart, and F. Ries.
272 Doulton & Co., 17, Deansgate, Manchester.
Glazed Terra Cotta Fountain.
272a Chubb’s Lock and Safe Co., Limited, London and
Manchester.
Chubb’s Patent Diamond Safe, containing Diamonds exhibited
by Messrs. John Hall and Co., of King-street, Manchester, and con-
structed of hardened drill-proof steel, with sliding doors and steel
cage over the opening. By an ingenious mechanical contrivance the
doors are drawn back and the glass case containing the jewels is at
the same time moved up so as to be exposed to view outside the safe.
This safe and its cage is a precise reproduction of one made by
Messrs. Chubb to contain the celebrated Koh-i-noor diamond, which
was exhibited by Her Majesty the Queen at the first Great Inter-
national Exhibition of 1851.
273 Locke & Son, Mendelssohn House, Strangeways, Man-
chester.
Semi-cabinet Pianoforte, seven octaves. The Avenham Piano-
forte, composite design. Ye Earlye Englishe Pianoforte. Artistic
Cased Library Organ. The Empress, an ebonised pianoforte in
decorated case. Saloon Model Pianoforte in English oak. The
People’s Pianoforte, full trichord, iron frame, check-action, metal
pin-plate. Models of auctions, frames, timbers, &c., used in the
manufacture of pianofortes.
274 Lachenal & Co., Little James-street, Gray’s Inn-road,
London, W.C.
English Concertinas, with patent bowing valves. Duet Patent
Concertinas, Concertina with pianoforte fingering. Chromatic Anglo-
German Concertinas.
275 James Cole, 12, Reade’s Buildings, Peter-street, Man-
chester.
Violins and Bows. Violas. Violoncellos. Violin Case. Wood
for Violins.
F
281 Antonio Frilli, 4, Via Dei Fossi, Florence, Tuscany,
Italy.
Collection of Statuary, in Camara marble, alabaster, p*een
marl)le (serpentine), avith pillars in general kind of marbles, and
Assortment of Mosaics.
SECTION I.
277 Henshaw and Loebell, Limited, 20 and 22, Swan-
street, Manchester.
The Steinhard (registered) Upright Grand Piano, with all the
latest improvements, and of exquisite design. The Steinhard
(registered; Cottage Piano, with all the latest improvements and
exquisite design. Varied selection of Musical Instruments, of ancient
and modern designs ; also, special selection of Fittings for Musical
Instruments.
277a Binns Brothers, 20, 64, and 66, Chester-road, Man-
chester.
Metal frame Semi-cottage Piano (Collard and Collard), early
English front, with gold lines, check action, full trichord, seven
octaves, carved trusses, and metal pin plate. Upright Grand
(Kirkman & Son), constructed on the principle of the Horizontal
Grand, with wrought steel frame and wrest plank, gun-metal studs
and under-damper action. Upright Grand (Challen & Son),
octaves, in fine Italian walnut, with extended ends, marqueterie
panels, &c. ; continuous iron frame, overstrung, trichord throughout,
improved patent perfect repetition check action, with under-dampers.
Cottage Piano, in ebonised and gold iron frame, brass wrest pin plate,
trichord throughout, check action, fitted with Metzler ct Co.’s
patent organ attachment. The tone of the string continuously
sustained (as performed upon by the late Abbe Liszt). A Model
of the Patent Dulciphone or Automatic Piano Tone Moderator.
Upright Grand (J. and J. Hopkinson), overstrung, in American
walnut, with carved panels in the Italian Renaissance style, 7 \
octaves, and check action.
278 Henshaw & Co., 83, Piccadilly, Manchester.
Pianos, and a miscellaneous assortment of Musical Instruments
and Fittings, brass and string.
279 Tooth & C.'o., Bretby Art Pottery, Woodville, near
Burton-on-4'rent.
Bretby Ware, an artistic and decorative pottery, consisting of
vases, jardinieres, plaques, tazzas, flower-holders, card-trays, tea,
coffee, and dessert sets, toilet ware, and many other objects of a
useful and ornamental character.
INDUSTRIAL DESIGN.
83
282 Henry G. Stephenson, Barton Arcade, Deansgate and
St. Ann’s Square, Manchester.
A Selection of China, Glass, and Earthenware, including some
very fine porcelain enamels, and a specially-selected assortment of the
productions of the Crown Derby Porcelain Co.
283 Robert Mole & Sons, Granville-street, Birmingham.
Swords and Claymores of various patterns, for service and
presentation. Naval Cutlasses, Lances, Halberds, Foils, ttc.
Matchets, as largely used in the cultivation of coftee and sugar, and
for other tropical plantation purposes.
284 John Mallett & Son, 36, Milsom -street, Bath.
Indian, Chinese, and Japanese Gold and Silver, Jewelled and
Bronze Plate Jewellery and Curios. Enamels, Ivories, &c.
285 Peter Hertz, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Gold and Silver Manufacturing in modern and ancient fashions.
The Oldenborgian Drinking Horn. Copy from the chronological
collection from the Danish kings on the castle of Rosenborg.
286 Benton and Johnson, 63, King’s Cross-road, London,
W.C.
Gold and Silver Wires, Threads, Bullions, Braids, and Cords.
Gold Leaf. Gold and Silver Imitation Threads, Wires, Bullions,
Fringes, Braids, and Cords.
287 Ollivant and Botsford, 2, Exchange-street, Manchester.
Silver Plate, Jewellery, Watches, Chime Clocks.
288 John Hall & Co., 56, King-street, Manchester.
English-made Watches and Clocks. Manufactured Silver and
Electro-plate. Gem Jewellery, with models of the principal historic
diamonds of the world.
289 J. L. Jazowski, International House, 112, Bold-street,
Liverpool.
Real Amber Jewellery. Meerschaum Pipes and Cigar Holders.
Silver Jewellery. Electro-plated Articles. English and Continental
Goods.
290 John Mark, 3 and 5, St. Ann’s Square, Manchester.
China and Japan Court, comprising fine decorative art specimens
in Nankin, Canton, Satsuma, Kaga, Kioto, Hizen, Imari, Banko,
I
SECTION I.
Nagasaki, Tokio, and other Porcelain. Cloisonne Enamels, Carvings
in Ivoiy, Bronzes and Inlaid Metal Work, Cabinets, Lacquer Ware,
Screens embroidered in silk and gold. Fans, Hardwood Stands,
Bamboo Carvings, Whatnots, Brackets, &c.
Ettore Montani, 6 , Via Della Croce, Rome, or Italian
Consulate, Manchester.
A^ase sculptured in Cameo. Gold and Silver Jewellery.
T. R. Russell, Cathedral Works, 18
Liverpool.
Watches, Clocks, Statuary.
Church -street.
Robert Watson & Co., Surdah, Lower Bengal ; agents ;
Messrs. Matheson & Co., 3, Lombard-street, London.
Specimens of Silk reeled at Surdah Filature. Silk AVaste,
Silk Cocoons.
PizziE AND Cramp, 34, Earl-street, Coventry.
Ribbons and Dress and Mantle Trimmings.
Thomas Wardle, Leek.
Living Silk-producing Lepidoptera. Various species of living
Silk-producing Larvae or Caterpillars, with their Cocoons and the
Moths which have emerged therefrom. It is intended to exhibit
alive as many species of silk-producing Lepidoptera as possible,
both British and exotic, showing all their metamorphoses from the
egg to the perfect moth.
Bengal Silk Co., Limited, Calcutta; London agents,
Anderson Brothers, 16, Philpot-lane, E.C.
Raw Silk produced by the Company at their Rangamathy,
Banjetty, Gonatea, and Cossinbazar Filatures.
Les Petits fils de C. J. Bonnet & Co., 8, Rue du Griffon,
Silk Cocoons. Raw Silk. Reeled Silk. Dyed Silk. Silk Stuffs,
comprising Faille, Satin, Faille Fran9aise, Merveilleux, and various
new armures, in all silk, silk and wool, and silk grenadine, in over
fifty qualities.
316 J. Vanner & Sons, 1, Coleman-street, London.
Spitalfields Silk for umbrellas.
1
317 Lewis and Allonby, Eegent-street and Conduit-street,
London.
Reversible Surat. Coloured and Black Dress Silks. Rich
Jacquard-loom Brochb Silks. Silk Long Cloth.
318 Tom Bradwell & Co., Dane Mills, Congleton, Cheshire.
Sewing Silks for Hand and Machine Use. Knitting, Crewel,
Filoselle, and Embroidery Silks. Tailors’ Twists. Bootmakers’
Closing Twists, &c.
319 J. Milligan & Son, Buxton, Derbyshire.
Derbyshire Hand-wrought Silk Hosiery.
320 John Had wen & Sons, Kebroyde Mills, near Halifax.
Waste Silk in the Raw and Stages of Manufacture. Spun Silk -
for Laces. Velvet Plush Hosiery and Mixed Goods. Sewing and
Filoselle Silks.
321 Henry Tucker & Co., Castleton Silk Mills, Eochdale ;
and Pendleton Silk Mill, Manchester.
Waste Silk, and Waste Silk Yarns, and products from same,
and products from raw silk.
322 John Mason, Park Green Mill, Macclesfield.
English-made Silk Plush Handkerchiefs, Mufflers, Squares, and
Sashes.
323 Enrico Meyer & Co., Via Andegari, Milan, Italy.
Raw and Thrown Silks.
324 P. Wild & Co., The Forge Mills, Congleton.
Spun Silk, Machine Twists, Filoselles, Embroideries, and other
Yarns.
325 Clayton Marsdens & Co. Limited, Wellington Mills,
Halifax.
Waste Silk and Spun Silk Yarns.
326 James Pearsall & Co., 155 and 156, Cheapside, London,
E,C.
Embroidering Silks and Filoselles, in unfading and washing
colours. Knitting Silks. Machine Sewing Silks, for the leather
trade and for general purposes. Upholstery Covering and Fringeing
Silks. Tussah Silks. Upholstery Satins, in unfading colours.
327 Henry Hogg & Son, Congleton, Cheshire; and John
Godwin, Macclesfield.
Specially Thrown Organzine. Specially Thrown Tram. Silk
Handkerchiefs, Cut-ups, Mufflers.
SECTION I.
328 Fkancis Bag ley, Bailey-lane ; J. & T. P. Caldicott,
28, Much Park-street ; J. & J. Cash, Hertford-street ;
Dalton, Barton & Co., Earl-street ; F. W. Franklin,
Bailey-lane; G. Carey Franklin, Earl-street; George
Statham, 25, Much Park-street; Thos. Stevens,
Stevengraph Works; and A. S. Tomson, Grey Friars
Works.
Combined Exhibit of All Silk and Mixed Goods manufactured
by the above in Coventry, with the exception of A. S. Tomson,
waterer and finisher of all goods shown.
329 William Hammersley & Co., Mill-street, Abbey Green-
road ; and Bridge End, Leek, Staffordshire.
Dj’^ed Silks (Bombyx Mori) in Tailors’ Twist. Machine Twists,
Sewings, Embroideries. Filoselles, Crewels, M’’ashing Colours,
Knitting Silks, unfading colours for art and upholstery. Organzines
and Trams, weighted and unweighted. Softs and Souples in black
and colours, including the noted fast French and Desange blacks,
suitable for ribbons, velvets, chenilles, umbrellas, and all weaving pur-
poses. Indian and China Tussahs in dyed, raw, and manufactured
state.
330 Kershaw and Swindells, Paradise Mills, Macclesfield ;
28, Cheapside, London, E.C.
Silk Manufactures for neck and pocket wear. Plain and Fancy
Chenille.
331 William Chorlton & Co., 29, High-street, Manchester;
Silk Mill, Droylsden, near Manchester; Silk Mill,
Cheadle, Staffordshire.
Black Silk Crapes, various qualities.
332 The Pure Silk Manufacturing Co. of Vicenza, Italy,
Stabilimento Serico, Vicenza, Italy.
Loom in work, making the silk of the olden time. Show Case
at end of loom containing Specimens of the Silk of the Olden Time, in
black and colours.
333 Joshua Wardle & Sons, Leek, Staffordshire; dye works.
Leek Brook, Churnet, and Henci’oft.
Italian and China Organzinc and Tram, dyed in wliites, colours,
and black. Sewings, Tailors’ Twist, and Sewing-machine Twist, dyed
in whites, colours, black, and raven. Spun Silk, Embroidery, and
Sewing-machine Twist, dyed in whites, colours, and black, and raven.
Tussur Silk, Raw Orgaiizine, and Tram, bleached and dyed in whites,
colours, and black.
1
\
INDUSTRIAL DESIGN.
87
334 Thomas Wardle, Leek.
Silk Cocoon Reeling. Two Cocoon Reeling Machines at work —
a French one exemplifying the two principal methods of reeling
employed in the south of France, and an Italian one showing the
system of reeling in which the Tavelette Consono is used. The
French machine is worked by a French fileuse, or cocoon reeler, from
Lyons, who is engaged in reeling Bengal cocoons. The Italian
machine is employed in reeling Tussur silk cocoons, and by it is
shown the practicability of producing Tussur raw silk in a continuous
and even thread.
335 Thomas Wardle, Leek.
Series of Specimens illustrating Silk Entomology. A Collection
of Preserved Ova, Larvae, Cocoons, and Moths of extreme entomo-
logical and sericultural interest and importance. One cabinet .
contains all the principal species of Silk-producing Lepidoptera of
India, with their Cocoons. Moths from all parts of the world the
larvae of which produce silk cocoons.
336 Michael Borg, Silk Lace Manufacturer, 263 and 269,
Strada Beale, Yaletta, Malta; and 7, Wool Exchange,
Coleman -street, London, E.C.
Black and Cream Silk Square Shawls, Scarfs, Fichus, Flounces,
Trimmings and Mittens. Cream Silk Handkerchiefs. Collars and
Cuffs. Cream and Black Mantillas. Malta Mule Cloth Curtains
and Antimacassars.
337 Thomas Fraser Peppe, Arrah, Bengal, India ; agent,
Henry Birkbeck, 34, Southampton Buildings, London,
W.C.
Indian Tussah Silk.
338 CowLisHAw, Nicol, & Co. Limited, 16, Princess-street,
Manchester.
Upholstering Fabrics, Satin Damasks, Satins, Silk Tapestries,
Silk and Wool Tapestries, Silk Brocatelles, Silk and Chenille
Tapestries, Curtains and Covers, Silk Brocades, Silk Plush, Cotelines,
Silk and Cotton and Silk and Wool Cashmeres, Bouretta Tapestries,
Curtains and Covers. Embroidery for Dress and Upholstering
Purposes in Silk and Chenille. Duplicate samples of Silk Damask
made for Windsor Castle, Marlborough House, and the House of
Lords ; and duplicate sample of Embroidered Dress made for Her
Majesty the Queen in the year 1839.
339 Briggs & Co., 8, Church-street, Manchester.
Transferring Designs for Embroidery. Embroidery Silks from
raw state to finished needlework.
88
SECTION I.
340 Leek Embroideky Society; Mrs. Wardle, 54, South
Edward-street, Leek, Staffordshire.
Suggested Curtain in Tussur Silk and Gold Thread; ground
challet. Designed by C. Purdon Clarke, Esq., C.LE. Suggested
Curtain in Tussur Silk and Gold Thread ; ground Tussur. Designed
by "William Morris, Esq. Suggested Curtain in Tussur Silk and
Gold Thread. Copy of Printed Tisser, end of 17th century; ground
Tussur. Altar Cloth, Frontal and Super Frontal, worked for All
Saint’s, Leek, on Tussur plush, with Tussur embroidery, silk, and
gold thread. The Leek Church Carpets, worked by hand on meshes
cut in pile (.communicants’ kneelers for All Saints, Leek). A speci-
men of the reproduction of the old Tambour work for curtains.
Case of small pieces of Embroidery on Tussur Silk, Blotters ; Chair
Backs, Work-bags, Handkerchief Cases, Glove Cases, Brackets.
341 J. 0. Nicholson, Macclesfield Embroidery School, and
Eurniture Silks Manufacturing Company, Hope Mills,
Macclesfield.
Thrown Silks. Silk Damasks and Brocades. Furniture Fabrics
in spun silk, Tussah silk, and cotton. Dress Silks, plain and
broc^ed. Hand Embroideries — Portieres, Curtains, Table Covers,
and Borders, upon silks, satins, plushes, and Tussah silks. Bed
Coverlets, Table Cloths, Chair Backs, &c., upon cotton, linen, and
woollen cloths.
342 Ancient and Modern Silk Eabrics of English
Production.
Loan collection of silk fabrics of English weaving or manufacture
from Elizabethan times to the present.
343 Indian Fabrics.
This collection comprises a magnificent series of kinkhabs,
kahrita bags, brocades, and embroideries, principally collected by
Mr. Wardle during his visit to India in the winter of 1885-6.
344 Koyal Institution Collection of Silk Fabrics.
Collection comprising ancient patterned stufifs of great interest,
chiefly the result of the search of Dr. Bock. They Avere purchased
by the Royal Manchester Institution, whose committee have kindly
lent them to the Exhibition. They are historically arranged.
345 Coptic Fabrics.
Interesting series, beautifully mounted, consisting of ancient
specimens of Coptic weaving, chiefly sacerdotal, of the fifth century,
lent by C. P. Scott, Esq., honorary secretary to the Executive
Committee of this Exhibition.
r
SECTION II.
liv^j^^aTTZlST'ET^’:^'.
350
W. & E. Rigby, Queen’s Foundry, Blackhorse-street,
Bolton.
Pair of I2in. Cylinder, 24in. Stroke, Diagonal Reversible Steam
Engines. 6-Bowl Calender and Bowls.
Bowl.
Long Brass Bowl.
350a William Bodden & Son, Hargreaves Works, Oldham.
Spindles, Flj^ers, Collars, Wheels, and Footsteps of all kinds for
cotton, silk, woollen, and flax spinning and doubling.
350b W. N. Wilkinson & Co., 10, St. John’s-road, Long-
sight, Manchester.
Pulleys covered with patent perforated material, to prevent
straps from slipping.
351 The Singer Manufacturing Co.; head ofEce, 34,
Union Square, New York; 39, Foster-lane, London,
E.C. ; 107, Market-street, Manchester.
Sewing Machines. Arm Machine with Universal Feed,
for patching and general boot work. Automatic Buttonhole
Machine. Carpet Sewing Machine. Benches exhibiting method of
driving sewing machines by motive power. Drop-feed Machine for
cloth work. Wheel-feed Machine for leather work. Automatic
Buttonhole Machine. Chain-stitch Machine for manufacturing
purposes. Multiple Jacquard Card Machine, for connecting Jacquard
cards.
352 Henry W"all\vork & Co., Union Bridge Ironworks,
Charter-street, Manchester ; and City Sewing Machine
Works, Manchester.
Sturgeon’s Patent Gas Engines. Combination Yarn Testing
Machines. Fire Extinguisher with Pump, for mills. Portable Oil
Gas Generating Lamps. Samples of Various Malleable and Annealed
Castings. Sewing Machines running by power and treadle. Parts
and Attachments to Sewing Machines. Samples of Work done upon
the sewing machines. Juvenile Tricycle. Lubricator for gas engine
and other pm’poses.
Cotton Bowl. Long Cotton
Three Rigby’s Patent Universal Joints.
^2
SECTION II.
353 Geokge Perkins, 20, Piccadilly, Manchester.
One large Double Needle and Shuttle Sewing Machine, especially
fitted for sewing heavy cotton and canvas belting. One large Fring-
ing Machine (for power) for fringing Bolton quilts and shawls.
Samples of Heavy Belting sewn by machine, finished and unfinished.
354 Hindle, Norton & Co., Ironmonger-lane, Oldham, near
Manchester.
Dougill Gas Engine. Door Check and Spring for single and
double action doors. Friction Hoist.
355 Crossley Bros., Limited, Otto Gas Engine Works,
Openshaw, Manchester.
One 14-h.p. Nominal Horizontal Otto Gas Engine, driven by
gas made in the Dowson Economic Gas Apparatus exhibited outside,
and itself driving one Crompton dynamo.
356 Thomas C. Fawcett, Burmantofts and Old Victoria
Foundries, Leeds.
Wrought-iron Perforated Bottom Clay Grinding Pan. Semi-
Dry and Plastic Brick-making Machines. Duplex Lever Hand-power
Brick Press. Steam-power Brick Press. Plastic Brick-making
Machine. Weegee or Jigger for Dyers.
357 W. H. Bailey & Co., Hydraulic Engineers, Albion
Works, Salford, Manchester.
Patent Hydraulic Lift, suitable for a grain warehouse or other
purposes. Hydraulic Organ Blower, large and small size. Haag’s
Water Motor, suitable as an underground hauling engine (Sir
Hussey Vivian’s pattern). Lindermann and Bailey’s Double Cylinder
Direct-acting Steam Pump, Victor pattern, for boiler feeding, general
marine purposes, for bilge water, hydraulic lifts, &c. This pump
can be adjusted to go at any speed from one stroke to 300 double
per minute. Cymric Pattern, Fly-wheel, Double-acting Steam Pump.
Harlech ditto. Swivel Valve Single-acting Ram Pump, Challenger
pattern, Well Pump for power. Haag’s Oscillating Power Engine.
Vertical Double-acting Pump with sling and guide. Horizontal
Double-acting Pump and Power Engine. Horizontal Double-acting
Strap Pump on base plate. Double-acting Steam Pump on iron
base plate. Vertical Swivel Valve Steam Ram Pump for boiler
feeding, &c.
358 Hick, Hargreaves, & Co., Soho Iron Works, Bolton,
Lancashire.
High-class Steam Engine, with Corliss valves and valve gear ;
built-up cylinder, with separate liner and steam jacket ; high-speed
governor and Knowles’ supplementary governor ; built-up fly-wheel,
grooved with deep grooves for rope transmission, with separate centre
boss, arms, and
segments.
Automatic
Barring Engine
for turning
MACHINERY.
93
main engine. Automatic Motion for moving into gear and automa-
tically out of gear when main engine starts. Photographs and
Drawings of mill engines, valve gear, &c. Main Driving Lines of
Shafting, with Couplings, New Swivel Pedestals, Self-Lubricating and
Ordinary Pedestals, Rope Driving Pulleys, Belt Pulleys, &c.
359 Joshua Schofield & Sons, Commercial Mills, Corn-
brook, Hulme, Manchester.
Finishing Machine for velvets, velveteens, cords, &c. Treble
Brush Dressing Machine for velvets, velveteens, and cords.
360 William Dickinson & Sons, Phoenix Ironworks,
Blackburn.
Loom, Jucker’s patent. Jucker’s Patent Loom, with overpick
and underpick combined, and with patent automatic motion for
exchanging the shuttle when the weft fails ; patent fast reed
motion, with loose reed swell and patent clutch driving. This loom
is constructed to weave pile fabrics, two pieces face to face, or two
pieces of plain cloth, each with proper selvages, or ordinary plain
cloth. Loom, 3 6 in. reed space, for weaving plain calicoes, con-
structed for light running, at a speed up to 250 picks per minute,
fitted with the maker’s patent handkerchief motion for weaving plain
borders or checks, putting two or more picks in one shed as required.
Loom, 3 Gin. reed space, weaving checks, with three shuttle drop
boxes, worked by patent link and chain motion, square bushed stop
rod, for weaving heavy cloths in a light running loom. Loom, 36in.
reed space, for weaving heavy goods, with three shuttle drop boxes,
aiTanged with card motion, and patent motion for handkerchief
weaving. Winding Machine, of 50 spindles, to wind from cops to
warpers’ bobbins, and also from coloured hanks, with both heart and
mangle wheel motions for shaping the bobbins. Warping Machine,
with patent automatic stopping motion, measuring motion, falling
rollers for taking up slack yarn, brake, expanding front and
back combs. Slasher Sizing Machine, cylinders 84in. and 48in.
diameter, GOin. wide, seamless copper size roller, side shaft, with
friction motion ; patent tension motion, patent double roller press
motion, cone drum driving, with disengaging gear ; improved dhootie
marking motion, &c. Size Mixing Apparatus. Samples of Shuttles,
Shuttle Tongues, and other accessories. Bobbins, Pickers, Picking-
Bands, and general sundries for weaving machinery.
361 Lord Brothers, Canal-street Works, Todmorden.
Revolving Flat Carding Engine. Ring Spinning Frame.
362 Harrison, McGregor & Co., Albion Iron Works, Leigh,
Lancashire.
Self-raking Reaper, with turn-up platform and five automatic
or manual controllable rakes or
Mowing and Reaping Machines.
Sharpener.
gatherers. Two-horse Combined
Chaff Cutters. Knife and Finger
94
SECTION IT.
363 John Tatham, Moss Lane and Milnrow-road Iron
Works, Kochdale.
Bare Spindle Cop Spinning Frame for cotton, for producing cops
exactly like the mule and on the bare spindle. Bare Spindle Cop
and Spinning Frame for worsted, for produci"<g cops exactly like
worsted cops, but hitherto only spun by means of a mule. Cotton
and Cotton Waste Carding Engine. Automatic Self-feeding and
Weighing jMachine attached to carding engine. Automatic Self-
changing Can Coiling Motion.
364 H. Bury, 27, Arcade Chambers, St. Mary’s Gate, Man-
chester.
General Electric Lighting Plant. Telephones. Electrical
Sundries. Wrought-iron Split Pulleys.
364a James Warwick, 22, Gratton-street, Oxford-road,
Chorlton-on-Medlock.
Models of a New Mechanical Motion.
365 '^The Patent Exhaust Steam Injector Co., Limited,
4, St. Ann’s Square, Manchester.
Exhaust Injectors for feeding stationary boilers by means of
exhaust steam and for locomotives. Automatic Re-starting Injectors.
Automatic Re-starting Injectors specially for locomotives. Throttle
Valves. Water Level Indicators. Automatic Railway Wagon
Coupling (model). Expansion Low Water Alarm. Sectional Model of
Exhaust Injector.
366 William Jessop & Sons, Limited, Brightside Steel
Works, Sheffield.
Cast-steel Spur Wheel, 16ft. diameter. Cast-steel Crank Shaft,
8 tons. Cast-steel Fly-wheel Shaft, 7 tons. Cast-steel Cylinder
Cover, 3 tons. Cast-steel Tram Wheels, with patent fastener. Cast-
steel Connecting Rod. Cast-steel Piston Rod. Assortment of Cast-
steel Gearing, &c. Assortment of all kinds of Tool Steels. Assort-
ment of Spindle and Mule Steels.
366a .Craven Brothers, Limited, Vauxhall Iron Works,
Osborne-street, Manchester.
Ropc-])Ower 'Travelling Crane, 26ft. span, will lift and travel a
safe working load of 20 tons, controPed by a man seated at one end
of the girders, where he has a clear view of the lifting hook. The
Crane is driven b}^ a small pair of direct-acting coupled engines, fixed
at one end of boiler-house, with a rope pulley on engine shaft. The
driving rope runs from this pulley the full length of gantry, and gives
motion to the crane in travelling or lifting in any part of gantry. The
man on the -crane can stop and start the engines, so that the rope
need not rim when the crane is not required. The crane is carried
by a gantry 150ft. long, of rolled iron girders supported by cast-iron
columns independent of the Exhibition building. The crane was
employed lifting the boilers, each weighing 21 tons, and other heavy
exhibits, before the opening of the Exhibition, and will be employed
for the same purpose after the close.
MACHINERY.
367 William Allen, Union Brass and Iron Works, Great
Ancoats, Manchester.
Compound High and Low Pressure Marine Engine, 12in. and
20in. steam cylinders, 16in. stroke, fitted up with propeller and shafts,
&c. Steam Donkey Pump for general purposes. Gun-metal Steam,
and Hot Water Valves, and Taps and Fittings. Cast-iron Steam
Valves.
368'^Nightingale Bros., Paterson, New Jersey, U.S.A.
A Machine to Wind Quills for Looms, either silk or cotton. The
machine doubles any number of ends together on the empty quills.
It has 40 spindles. The quills are wound upright, requiring no
former. An Attachment to Looms designed to let off silk from the
beam of the loom automatically while in motion.
369 WiLLAN AND MiLLS, Rose Hill Foundry, Blackburn.
Loom with Jepson’s Dobby attached.
370 Thomas Stevens, Stevengraph Works, Coventry.
Jacquard Loom in motion, for the manufacture of fancy silk goods.
371vHacking & Co., Lord-street, Bury, Lancashire.
Loom with patent shuttle motion, shuttle check motion, and
weft selvedge motion. Folding and Measuring Machine, with patent
table motion.
372 Devoge & Co., 15a, York-street (first floor), Manchester ;
works, 462, Oldham Road.
Loom, weaving 30in. cloth at the rate of 180 to 200 picks per
minute, fitted with a 400’s Double Lift Double Cylinder Jacquard,
which can be altered when required, to weave as a compound
Jacquard for cross-border work. 400’s Double Lift Single Cylinder
Jacquard, for working at the rate of 160 to 180 picks per minute.
600’s Single Lift Jacquard, with swing batten motion, for weaving
about 120 picks per minute. 400’s Single Lift Jacquard, vith hori-
zontal or slide motion, for use in sheds with insufficient height for
the swing motion. 812’s Fine Gauge Jacquard Machine, for use in
lace manufacturing. 1200’s Devoge’s Improved Rising and Falling
or Double Shed Jacquard, for weaving heavy goods requiring a deep
shed. Samples of Couplings, Lingoes, Mails, &c., requisite for
harnessing Jacquard machines.
373 William Crossley, Chapel Works, Wrigley Head, Fails-
worth, near Manchester.
Power Loom, weaving silk handkerchiefs with cross border.
Double-lift Jacquard Machine.
374 V Wright Shaw, Bank Foundry, Bredbury, near Stockport.
Scarf, Handkerchief, and Check Loom. Five Shuttles and
Chain Economiser.
96
SECTION II.
375 James Walton & Sons, Haughton Dale Mills, Denton,
near Manchester.
Card Setting Machine for fillets. Card Setting Machine for
flats and sheets. Card Setting by hand, as earned on before the
invention of the card setting machine. Samples of the various kind
of Cards used in the carding of cotton and other fibrous substances.
376 David Madeley, 3, China-lane, Piccadilly, Manchester.
Fustian Loom, weaving patent corduroys. Cord Cutting Machine
by steam power. Samples of Finished Goods.
377 Waterside Iron Works Co., Waterside Works,
Dukinfield, Cheshire.
Cotton Loom for weaving cotton goods of any strength, plain,
twills, sateens, and fancies of all kinds. Woollen Loom for weaving
worsted and woollen goods of all kinds. Express Roving Frame with
fixture, long collars, and swivel attachments.
37 8 'William Eyder, Bee Hive Works, Folds-road, Bolton.
Gravity Spinning Spindle, in ring spinning frame of 48 spindles
running at high speeds. Gravity Doubling Spindle, in ring doubling
frame of 36 spindles for fine and coarse doubling at high speeds.
Samples of Fluted Rollers, Plain and Fluted Top Rollers, Slubbing
and Roving Spindles and Flyers, Ring Spinning and Doubling
Spindles, Mule Spindles, &c. Working Model of Forging Machine,
one-third natural size.
379 Ralph Heaton & Sons, The Mint, Birmingham.
Cold Wrought Seamless Copper Tubes, Brass and Copper
Tubes (plain and ornamental), Rolled Metals, Wire, Gasfittings,
Waterfittings, Bedstead Fittings, Spun Work, Stamped Ornaments,
Coins, Checks, Medals, Blanks, &c. Coining Press in motion
striking medals.
380 J. H. Pickup k Co., Britannia Tin and Copper Works,
Clerke-street and Foundry-street, Bury.
Large Copper Steam Drying Cylinder, on cavity principle.
Copper Rollers. Copper Cylinder. Tin Rollers.
381 Sir Joseph Whitworth & Co., Limited, Openshaw,
Manchester.
Hollow Propeller Shaft, 55ft. long, 18 Jin. diameter, with a
lOin. hole, collar at one end 34in. diameter. Complete Set of
Forgings for 68-ton Gun, consisting of tube 26J tons, breech piece
18 tons, B tube 17 tons, 5 hoops 40 tons, and breech screw
23 J cwt ; total weight 102 tons. Weldless Steel Boiler Shell, 12ft.
diameter by 6ft. 6in. long. Full Size Wood Model of the City of
Rome crank shaft. 14in. Air Vessel, to contain the compressed
air for the propulsion of the Whitehead torpedo. These vessels are
MACHINERY.
used by the English Government, and are tested to a proof pressure
of 1,5001b. per square inch. Length, 5ft. Gin. ; thickness, from *25in. to
•3 Sin. Ring and Plug, made of mild fluid pressed steel. This ring
was heated and shrunk on to the 18in. jAug, and when cold the plug
was pushed out by a hydraulic pressure of 3,200 tons, thus illustrating
the enormous power of shrinkage. Pair of Whitworth Steel Shot
Tubes. Longitudinal Section of Hollow Ingot. Wrought-iron Armour
* Plate, by Sir J. Brown & Co., Sheffield, 18in. thick, perforated by
a steel shell fired from the Whitworth 9iii. 20-ton breech-loading gun.
The Shell, made of Whitworth steel, after perforating the above j)late.
The above armour plate was placed against a steel hoop 3 Tin. long,
filled with hard rammed sand, behind which was placed a steel and
oak backing Tin. thick ; this was supported by a cast-iron plate
19ft. Gin. long, 5ft. wide, and 14in. deep, held in position by baulks
of timber, all well bedded and covered with damp sand. The pro-
jectile, after perforating the 18in. of armour, passed through the sand,
and then through the steel plate and oak backing, broke up the cast-iron
plate, and finally buried itself in the sand at a distance of ITft. from
the face of the target, and at a depth of 4ft. below the cast-iron plate.
TO-pounder Shot after being fired. This shot was fired from the deck
of the Stork gunboat, at Portsmouth, in Oct. 1858, from a 68-pounder
cast-iron gun, rifled hexagonally, and against a wrought plate 4in.
tliick, attached to the side of the Alfred. The powder charge was
121b. R.L.G. powder, and the range 450 yards. The shot was driven
through the plate and entered the planking of the ship’s side. This
was the first instance of penetration against a 4in. armour plate with
solid shot, and from it dates the use of steel projectiles for that purpose
Self-acting Surfacing, Sliding, and Screw-cutting Foot Lathe. Height
of centres 5in., length of bed 5ft., to admit between centres 2ft. 9in.
Whitworth Measuring Machine, to measure differences of 100,000th
of an inch. Gravity Piece, and Set of Standards, of length
from lin. to 12in., advancing by lin., in a box. Set Internal and
External Standard and Cylindrical Gauges, -lin. to 2in., rising by |^in.,
in a box. These Gauges, by an order in Council dated August 26th,
1881, were made legal Board of Trade standards, and a complete
set from -Olin. to 6in. is deposited in the Standard Department of the
Board of Trade. Whitworth Hand Screwing Apparatus. Boxes con-
taining Stocks, Dies, Taper, Master Taps, Wrenches, Ac. Pair of
Whitworth Hexagonal Surface Plates. I'liese surface plates, besides
being supported 3 points, are also suspended from the same points,
and remain true when so suspended. Powder Magazine, made of
cormgated brass.
382 Dobson and Barlow, Bolton.
Machinery for Preparing and Spinning Cotton.
383 Curtis, Sons, & Co., Phoenix Works, Chapel-street,
Ancoats, Manchester.
Double Crighton Opener, with two vertical conical beaters, com-
bined to single scutcher and lap machine, with driving apparatus
attached, down draft, to make laps for carding engines 40in. on the
wire, feed table with horizontal beater, arranged to feed through
both, or only through the second beater. Single Scutcher and Lap
Machine, with down draft to make laps for carding engines, 40in. on
the wire, for hand feeding or for laps, cone regulator and pedal feed
motion. Carding Engine, witli cylinder 50in. diameter, 40in. on the
wire, shell' feeder, licker-in 9in. diameter, clothed with steel inserted
wire, dolfer 24in. diameter, 106 iron flats, l|iu. wide, fly doffing
comb, calender delivery, and coiler for cans 3 Gin. by 9in. Drawing
Frame, three heads, three deliveries, with stationery cloth, loose Ix^ss,
top rollers for front line, back and front stop motions, stop motion
when cans are full, weight relieving motion. Lap Doubling Machine,
to make laps Tin. wide for comber.'^, lap part and stop motion for 14
cans. Heilmann’s Combing Machine, with six heads, for laps Tin.
wide, cut cams with interchangeable segments for circular combs, and
weight relieving motion. Thompson and Barker's Patent Combing
Machine, with eight heads, with gearing in the centre, two pairs of nip
jaws by which each end passes over the circular combs, with cut cams
and interchangeable segments for the circular combs for silk or cotton.
Slubbing Frame, 38 spindles, lOin. lift, 18in. staff, long collars, single
centrifugal pressers, division plates, loose boss top rollers for front
line, with Curtis and Rhodes’s patent winding motion, which is also
applied to the intermediate and roving frame ; hank indicator.
Intermediate Frame, 56 spindles. Sin. lift, 19 Jin. staff, long collars,
single centrifugal pressei's, loose boss, top rollers for front line ; hank
indicator. Roving Frame, 72 spindles. Tin. lift, 20gin. staff, long
collars, single centrifugal pressers, loose boss, top rollers for front line ;
hank indicator. Ring Spinning Frame, 136 spindles, 2|in. gauge,
5in. lift, sliding thread guides for doffing, patent reversible rings,
rabbeth and other patent spindles. Patent Self-acting Mule, 360
spindles, Ifin. gauge, spindles 64in. in draw, 2 thread boss rollers,
independent drawing-up and backing-off motion, loose boss, top rollers
for front row, rollers geared at the headstock, assistant taking-in
scroll, scroll band tightening arrangement, self-acting strap relieving
and snarling motions, faller shafts working on friction bowls,
, automatic nosing motion, full cop stopping motion, backing-off chain
tightening motion, faller depressing motion, etc. Patent Self-acting
Mule, Rhodes’s patent, in which the carriage and roller beam travel
to and from each other, 360 spindles, l|iu. gauge, 64in. draw, treble
boss rollers, loose boss, top rollers to front line, strap relieving motion,
anti-snarling motion, etc. Stop-motion Doubling Drum Winding
Frame, 26 drums, with Ashworth’s patent for stopping the drum
when an end breaks. Thompson and Fitton’s Patent Self-acting
Wheel-cutting Machine, to cut wheels from lin. to 24in. diameter,
pitch jjViu. to Ifin.
384 A[ather and Platt, Salford Iron Works, Manchester.
Calico Printing Machine for printing from 1 to 10 colours
upon clotli up to 34in. wide. Driven by the Manchester Dynamo
^lotor of 20h.p , worked from Mather and Platt’s engines and
dynamos in the Electric Lighting Section, at a distance of 100
yards. Patent Electric Calico Singeing Machine to clean the surface
machinery.
99
of cloth before printing, arranged with platinum bars which can be
instantaneously heated by the passage of an electric current.
Apparatus for regulating the temperature of the bars. The singeing
machine is driven with a 5h.p. Manchester dynamo motor by
chain gear. Patent Friction Clutches and Clutch Couplings, per-
fectly balanced, for running at high speeds, and so ai’ranged that
they cannot be thrown into gear by centrifugal force. Woi’king
Model of Electric Railway.
385 Shepherd and Ayrton, Gorebrook Iron Works,
Longsight, Manchester.
Improved 10-spindle Self-acting Spooling iMachine, with guide
lifting aniil stopping motions. Patent Doubling or Twisting Machine
for putting in twists for one turn of the si)indle.
385a The Lee Spinning Co., 2, Charlotte-street, Mosley-
street, Manchester.
Doubling, Spooling, and Making-up of Sewing Cotton.
386 William Tatham & Co., Ynlcan Works, Molesworth-
street, Rochdale.
One High-class Slubbing Frame, of 36 spindles, fitted with grip
spindle rail, and with self-locking loose boss top roller. C^arding Engine
Bend, for setting rollers and clearers to each other. Samples of Self-
locking Loose Boss Top Rollers, Ac.
387 Dronsfield Bros., Atlas Works, Oldham.
Grinding Frame for revolving flats. Card Mounting Machine.
Roller Calender, leather rollers. Grinders and Grinding Rollers.
Splicing Machine. Press, with turntable. Sundry Machines for
roller covering. Model of Setting Motion for card rollers. Samples
of Emery Filleting.
388 Edward Moser, Engineer, Leeds.
Raising Machine, with differential motion and 14 needle-pointed
card rollers, to produce with one and the same card a full even nap
on any class of light or heavy cotton, woollen, worsted, or mixetl
cloth.
380 The Bradford Manufacturing Co., 29, Canal -road,
Bradford, Yorkshire.
Jaccpiard Loom, weaving a silk handkerchief containing portraits
of Her Majesty, the Prince of Wales, and Prince Albert Victor, and
pictures representing important events in Her Majesty’s life.
390 Samuel Spencer, Clegg-street, Besses-o’th-Barn, White-
field, near Manchester.
Hank Sizing, Scouring, and Wringing Machine.
100
SECTION II.
391 De Bergue & Co., Limited, Strange ways Iron Works,
Manchester.
Portable Pueumatic Rivetter (small size), for liii. rivets, with
])iece of girder to show mode of application.
392 W. H. Bailey & Co., Albion Works, Salford, Manchester.
Cymric Pattern Stationary Steam Fire Engine. Besides being
ready for fire purposes, it is used to pump from a sump all the water
discharged by hydraulic motors about the Exhibition buildings and
return the water to the lake, thus economising the consumption of
town’s water. It will force for fire purposes about two tons of water
per minute 150ft. high. A collection of Sandringham Hand Fire
Pumps. A collection of Fire Brigade Fittings. A collection of
Ladders and other Appliances for Fire.
393 Henry Marriott & Co., 23, Portland-street, Manchester;
Newbridge Mills, Stockport.
Thirty -six inch Power Loom, fitted with patent shuttle guard,
and weaving coloured cotton fabrics.
394 Joseph Stubbs, Mill-street, Ancoats, Manchester.
Doubling-Winding Frame, drop-wire system, to wind from two
or more ends, with self-acting stop-motion. Quick Traverse Winding
Frame, drop-wire system, to wind from two or more ends, with self-
acting stop-motion. Cotton Gassing Frame. Bobbin Reel for
doubler, throstle, or ring-spinning bobbins. The latter fitted with
snarl or kink preventors. Cop Reel. Yarn Bundling Press, by hand
and power. Piecing Machine for taking knots out of doubled yarn,
<fec. Automatic Stripper for carding engines.
395 Henry Liyesey, Limited, Greenbank Iron Works,
Blackburn.
Loom, with drop-box and dobby, for weaving all kinds of fancy
goods, such as ginghams, checks, Harvards, lenos, brillantes, tkc.
Loom for weaving all kinds of heavy fabrics, such as domestics,
sheetings, velvets, fustians, &c. Samples of Shuttles, Bobbins,
Tubes, and Mill Furnishings.
396 Junction Ironworks Co., Limited, Newton Heath.
Thomas Ashworth’s Patent Cup Throstle for spinning and
doubling.
397 George Moulton, Whitley-street, Rochdale-road, Man-
chester.
Engraving Machinery for Calico Printers. Flat Table Penta-
graph Machine to engrave rollers 52in. long and 60in. circumference.
Double Elevating Bar Pentagraph Machine, fitted with close set
levers, new patent side levers, and slash arms. Mill Engraving
Machine, with new canting arrangement and driving gear.
MACHINERY.
I
□
1 398 John & Edward Wood, Victoria Foundry, Bolton.
Corliss Engine, with cylinder 25in. diameter and 5ft. stroke,
with Improved Valve Gear. Steam Barring Engine, with Automatic
Disengaging Gear. Belt and Rope Pulleys.
399 John and William McNaught, St. George’s Foundry,
Bochdale.
Machinery for Scouring and Washing Wool. Machinery for
Drying Wool.
400 Watson, Laidlaw & Co., Engineers, Dundas-street,
Kingston, Glasgow.
Weston’s Patent Self-balancing Suspended Hydro-extractor, with
centrifugal friction driving pulley for drying textile material. Pivot
or underdriven ditto, with high-speed steam engine. Patent Extractor
or Centrifugal, with central bottom discharge for drying sugar,
chemicals, &c. Patent Self-balancing Cream Separator. Centrifugal
Oil Extractor. Hand-power Emulsion Separator for makers of photo-
graphic materials. Ditto for laboratory use. Centrifugal Testing
Machine for milk, butter, soap, and other substances. Patent Centri-
fugal and Automatic Friction Driving Pulley. The Kingston
Positive Action Pump. Self-oiling Bearings for shafting. Models of
Centrifugal Machines. Samples of Chemical and other Substances
dried or separated in machines similar to those exhibited.
401 Thomas Broadbent & Sons, Central Iron Works,
Huddersfield.
60in. Steam Hydro-extractor, suspended on links, and
driven with high-speed direct-acting steam engine, self-contained,
and fitted with wire basket for drying textile fabrics. 26in.
Self-balancing Hydro-extractor for laundries, underdriven by belt,
with perforated tinned copper cage. 48in. Patent Suspended
Direct Steam-driven Centrifugal Machine for drying sugar and
chemicals. 60in. cage for Hydro-extractor, made of solid copper,
and adapted for extracting with acids. Patent Steam Dye-baths,
for heating porcelain dye-pots by means of steam.
402 Anglo-American Brush Electeic Light Corporation,
Limited, 112, Belvedere-road, Lambeth, London, S.E.
Brush Vertical Compound Engine, driving E2 Victoria
com pound- wound dynamo, by means of Raworth’s friction gear.
Brush Vertical High-pressure Engine, driving C2 Victoria
compound-wound dynamo by means of friction gear. Brush Trunk
Engine, driving B2 Victoria compound-wound dynamo direct. Pro-
jectors for naval and marine purposes, canal navigation, &c. No. 5L
Brush Dynamo, with laminated armature. Armatures for Brush
and Victoria dynamos. Ratchet Lamps for 10 and 5 ampere
cun'ent. Incandescence Lamp Fittings, &c.
SECTION IT.
102
403 Edgak C. Mills, 49, Victoria Buildings, Manchester.
Automatic Draught Ilegulator for Heating Apparatus. Boilers.
403a John Cockill & Sons, Liversedge, Yorkshire.
Condeusor Rubbing Leathers.
404 Henry Simon, 20, Mount-street, Manchester.
Simon’s Four-roller Mill, with fluted rolls. Four-roller Mill,
with one pair smooth and one pair fluted rolls. Three-high Heavy
Pattern Roller ]\Iill, with smooth rolls. Three-high Roller Mill,
with fluted rolls. Three-high Roller Mill, with smooth rolls. Two-
high Roller Mill, with smooth rolls. Middlings Purifier. Gravity
Semolina Purifiers, with Brush arrangement. Patent Centrifugal
No. L, 3 sheets, with double worm and wiper. Patent Centrifugal
No. II., 2 sheets, with single worm and wiper. Complete Set of
Elevator Ironwork. Broken-bladed Worm, complete. Patent
Wrought-iron Pulleys. Friction Clutch in combination with pulley.
Turbine, with slide to regulate the water supply.
404a Arthur Smart & Co., Bobert-street Mill, near Victoria
Station, Manchester.
Bunting. Flags. Lamp and Candle Cottons. Engine Waste.
Engine Packings. Cotton Driving Ropes, Ac., Ac.
Oldfield-road Ironworks, Salford, Man-
405 John Cameron
Chester.
llin. Double-ended Patent Cam and Lever Punching Machine.
14in. Double-ram Pump, 12in. stroke, two 26in. cylinders. Gin.
Quadruple acting Piston Fire Pump, Sin. stroke, with two 12in.
cylinders. Quadruple Ram Pump, having two main rams 5in.
diameter, and two auxiliary rams 3|-in. diameter, lOin. stroke, two
loin, steam cylindei'S. tin. Doublc-rarn Horizontal Pump, Sin. stroke,
with Sin. cylinder. 5in. Double-acting Piston Pump, 5in. stroke, with
SJin. cylinder. 5in. Double-ram Box Bedplate Pump, Gin. stroke,
two Tin. cylinders. 5in. Double-ram New’ Patent Pump, Gin. stroke,
tw’o Tin. cylinders, tin. Single-ram Box Bedplate Pump, Gin. stroke.
Tin. cylinder. 3in. Single-ram New Patent Pump, 5in. stroke, 5in.
cylinder. 2 Jin. Hydraulic Organ Blow’er, llin. stroke.
40G Goodbrand & Co., Southall Ironworks, Southall -street,
Manchester.
Horizontal Steam Engine, Itin. cylinder by 28in. stroke.
Horizontal Steam Engine, 3Jin. cylinder l>y Gin. stroke. Diagonal
Steam Engine, two steam cylinders lOin. diam. by Itin. stroke.
Diagonal Steam Engine, Gin cylinder by 12in. stroke. Quadrujfle-
acting I’ump, working barrels lOin. diain., two steam cylinders 20in.
by Loin, stroke. Quadruple-acting Stationary Fire Pump, working
MACHINERY
103
barrels Tin. diam., two steam cylinders 12in. diam. by 9in. stroke.
5in. Double-acting Ram Pump, two steam cylinders Tin. diam. by
Gin. stroke. Sin. Single-acting Ram Pump, steam cylinder Gin.
diam. by 5in. stroke. Double-acting Excelsior Pump, working
barrel Sin. diamr, steam cylinder GHn. diam. by 5in. stroke. Anti-
Incrnstatioii Pumps, ram |in. diam. by l|in. stroke. Steam Engine
Recorder, patent. Boiler Feed Pumps, witli rams I Jin., I Jin., 2in.,
2Dn., and Sin. diam. Ram Pump, 21-in. diam. by 5in. stroke, steam
cylinder 5in. diam., to bolt to wall.
407 Lancaster and Tonge, Lancaster Works, Pendleton,
Manchester.
The Lancaster High-pressure Steam Trap. High-pressure
Forcing Steam Trap. Expansion Trap. Spiral Spring Piston,
ranging from 52in. down to Tin. SOin. Cylinder, with ^^'ston. Tin.
and Sin. Cylinders, for practically testing the Lancaster Spiral
Spring Piston. Patent Piston Block. Kidd’s Patent Automatic
Pump, ranging from No. T to No. 0. Single and Double Acting
Ram Pump (Cameron’s principle), fitted with the Lancaster Piston.
Vibration Lubricators. Kidd’s Patent Cylinder Lubricator. 9in. by
IGin. Oblique Engine, fitted with variable expansion gear and
regulating governor. 9in by 12in. Vertical Engine, fitted with the
Lancaster Steam Trap. Brass and Iron Valves and Taps, ranging
from lOiii. to Jin. Boiler Fittings.
408 Arthur Bates, 31, Dutton-street, New Bridge-street,
Manchester.
Cesar CoiTon’s Patent Hank Dyeing Machine. Consists of a light
framework, with movable carnages, for the automatic and successive
transfer of the I’ods carrying the hanks from one position to another,
and for keeping the hanks all the time rotating. Driv'en by power.
409 Dundebdale Wood k Co., Old Corn Exchange, Hanging
Ditch, Manchester.
Nut-finishing Machine. Faces both sides of nut, bevels and
chamfers externally and internally at one operation.
410 Small and Parks, 27, Exchange Buildings, St. Mary’s
. Gate, Jlanchester.
Pneumatic Engine Speed and Fan Pressure Recorder, for recording
speeds and })ressures at a distance ; also night watchman’s movements.
411 JoH\ J. IlOYLp:, 27 & 29, King-street West, Manchester;
1 3, Bed Lion Square, London ; 57, Hope-street, Glasgow.
Royle’s Patent Syphonia Steam Trap. Patent Full-way Syphonia
Traps. Box Steam Trap. Patent Expansion Steam Trap. Patent
Return Steam Trap and Hot AVater (212°) Boiler Feeder. Patent
Compound Steam Trap, or Ecpialising Box. Patent Oleojector, or
Engine Lubricator. Patent Steam Kettle. Patent Reducing Valves.
Patent Swivel Unions and Bends. Patent Combined Separator and
y-
Ni
104
SECTION II.
Engineers
Patent Hydraulic Test Pumps.
Brasswork. Sample Case of
Steam Trap, or Steam Dryer.
Assortment
Fusible Plugs for Steam Boilers,
412 Thomas Bkadfobd & Co., Crescent Iron Works, Salford;
Victoria-street and Deansgate, Manchester ; 130, Bold-
street, Liverpool; 140, 141, 142, k 143, High Holborn,
London.
Steam Laundry Machinery and Appliances. The Crescent
Ironing and Finishing Machine. Improved Hydro-Extractor, or
Centrifugal Drying Machine for steam power. ^lodel of Bradford’s
new Patent Safety Superheated Vapour Disinfecting Apparatus.
Model of Public Swimming Baths and Washing House.
412a Joseph Stott, 26, Clegg-street, Oldham.
Plans and Perspectives of Cotton Spinning Mills.
413 Tangyes, Limited, Birmingham and Manchester.
Exhibits in Motion ; Tangyes’ Vertical Engine, Sin. diameter
c}dinder with dynamo. Horizontal Engine, Belfast type, cylinder
12in. diameter by 24in. stroke, with Jefferiss’ patent automatic
expansion gear. Horizontal Engine, Tangye type, cylinder Sin.
diameter b}^ 16in. stroke, with Tangye and Johnson’s patent
expansion gear. High-Speed Engine, Floyd’s patent, cylinder 4in.
diameter. Eight-inch Centrifugal Pumping Engine. Special
Direct-acting Steam Pump, steam cylinder 12in. diameter, water
cjdinder Sin. diameter by 24in. stroke. Colonial Bam Pump,
steam cylinders Sin. diameter, rams 4in. diameter. Tangyes’ Gas
Hammer, Bobson’s patent, |cwt. size. Three-spindle Lathe.
Clierry’s Patent H 3 'draulic Hoist (Model). 3-ton Overhead Traveller,
Cherry’s patent, Exliibits not in motion : Tangyes’ Centrifugal
Pumps, 2in. and 12in. diameter. Self-acting Sliding and Screw-
cutting Lathe, Pendlebury’s patent. Sin. centres. Wheel Cutting
Machine, to cut up to 1 Sin. diameter. 40cwt. D.P. Hoisting Crab,
20cwt. S.P. Hoisting Crab. Assortment of Hydraulic Jacks, Screw
Jacks, Hydraidic Bears, Screw Bears, Weston’s Pulley Blocks (with
Tangyes’ Patent Guides), Cheny’s Brake Blocks and Bope Blocks.
Strainer-plate for paper makers.
414 Arthub Lowcock, Limited, Economiser Works,
Shrewsbury, England.
Lowcock’s Patent Fuel Economiser (with various forms of
inclined bottom box), consisting of 160 heating pipes. Single Boiler
Economiser, consisting of 48 solid drawn brass tubes, 2in. diameter
and 6ft. long, and 48 oolddrawn seamless steel tubes, 2in. diameter
and 7ft. long.
Union Engineebing Co. (C. Schiele and Co.), 2,
Clarence Buildings, Booth-street, Manchester.
One Colliery Ventilator, with engine and belt. One A^entilator
for Buildinjrs. One Air Propeller. Two Blowing Fans. Two
415
Exhausting Fans.
One Turbine AVater Wheel.
HRf»R
MACHINERY.
105
416 Price’s Patent Candle Co., Limited, Belmont Works,
Battersea, London, S.W.
Candle-making Installation, embracing candle machines and
specimens of palmitine, Hearine, and other candles, night lights,
toilet soaps, &c.
417 Heenan and Froude, Newton Heath Iron Works, Man-
chester, and Aston-lane, Aston, Birmingham.
Tower Spherical Engine, driving direct Phoenix dynamo machine.
Heenan and Fronde’s Patent Steam Fan. Tower Engine, coupled to
Capell Patent Fan. Tower Fhigine, driving Centrifugal Pumj).
Steam Pump for circulating purposes, Ac. Towner Spherical Launch
Engine, fitted Avith reversing gear. Heenan and Fronde’s New
Patent Arc Lamps.
418 Bentley and Ford, Portland Chambers, Longton,
Staffordshire.
Fourteen-inch High-pressure Horizontal Steam Fhigine, fitted
with Bentley and Ford’s Patent Equilibrium Slide VaHe, with
equilibrium automatic variable cut-off or expansion valve.
419 William Turner, Adelphi-street, Salford, Manchester.
oManchester Goods Baling Press, with 18in. cjdinder. Several
Vertical Single and Double Acting Land and Marine Pumping
Engines. Small Horizontal Driving Engine. Patent Automatic Air
Injector, for supplying the air vessels of pumping engines with air.
Working Model of William Turner’s Patent Compound Steam and
Hydraulic Cotton Baling Press. Brass Valves and Fittings and
Hydraulic Ram Leathers, in shoAV case. White’s Injector and Jet
Pumps, and BoAvers’s Separator.
420 Hind and Lund, Atlas Works, Preston.
Roller Mill, fitted Avith tAvo pairs of chilled iron rolls, one pair of
Avhich are corrugated for grinding wheat, and the other pair smooth
for gi’inding middlings or semolina. Patent Centrifugal Silk Flour
Dressing Machine, Ij s^ieet long. Combined Patent Semolina
Grader and Purifier. Sample Stand of Wrought-iron Worm Conveyors.
Sett of Elevators. Sample Stand of Chilled Iron Rolls, corrugated and
smooth.
421 Walker Brothers, Pagefield Iron Works, Wigan,
Lancashire.
Patent Air Compressing Engines. Photographs of Hauling
Machinery, to be Avorked by compressed air and steam ; also of
Locomotive Machinery in connection Avith the ventilation of the
nnrl T^nvinolc! Uti+pn'l'. FiinSJ SpItIpIp FfHIS. FlshpV
^Mersey and Severn Tunnels. Patent F^ans.
and Walker’s Patent Friction Clutches.
SECTION IT.
422 Gheenall Sc Co., 120, Portland-street, Manchester.
Steam Washers for Steam Power, with automatic reversing gear.
423 B. AND S. Massey, Steam Hammer Works, Openshaw,
Manchester.
70cwt. xVrch Framed Steam Hammer, with wrought-iroii stan-
dards. 3cwt. Pneumatic Power Hammer. 3cwt. Improved Rigby
Steam Hammer, with wrought-iron sides, llcwt. Overhanging SelF
acting and Hand-worked Steam Hammer, with slides. Icwt. Steam
Hammer for suspending to a beam or girder. Icwt. Drop Hammer.
Band Saw for cutting cold met -i Is,
metals
Circular Saw for cutting cold
Circular Saw’ for cutting hot metals.
424 Daniel Adamson & Co., Engineering Works, Dukinfield,
near Manchester.
Pair of Coupled Compound Horizontal Condensing Engines, wdtli
automatic expansion gear fitted with a high-pressure cjdinder with
rope driving. Patent Testing Machine, to test up to 100 tons.
This machine is arranged so that the full floating weight of 161b.
will register the maximum load. Observations can be recorded,
when the specimen under test stretches 1,500,000 of an inch.
Butterwortpi and Dickinson, Globe Iron Works,
Burnley.
Calico Loom, patent loose reed. Calico Loom, fast reed. Patent
Dobby, double barrel. Patent Dobby, single barrel. Warping
jMachine, with patent stop-motion. Warping Machine (falling rod),
w'ith patent stop-motion. Winding Machine for cop twist. Cylinder
Sizing Machine, with patent friction and patent yarn beam presser.
426 Fred. E. Jackson & Co., G, Union-street, Church-street,
Manchester.
Four-shuttled Drop-box Looms.
427 William Birch, ^lil ton-street Iron Works, Brough ton-
lane, Lower Broughton, Manchester.
Scutcher or Cutler for opening fabrics from the twisted or roi)C
form and detaining the twist. Angular Guides for taking crimps
and creases out of fabrics and guiding tliem automatically and cen-
trally. Metallic Squeezer for squeezing fabrics. Conical Differential
Expanders or Stretchers for stretcliing calicoes, &c. Open Soaper
for soaping and w’ashing fabrics. Newdy-improved Rotary Sewing
Machines for sewing piece ends.
428 P. M. Hodgkinson, Springl)ank File Works, Stalybridge.
File Cutting by Hand and by Machinery.
I
MACHINERY. 107
429 The Patent Grinding and Polishing Machine Co.,
1 8, Eclmuncl-street, Birmingham.
Grindstones and Troughs, fitted with patent adjustable guides
for obtaining true surfaces. Vice and other work holders and
specimens of work.
430 Charles Walmsley, Atlas Iron Works, Bury.
Three-throw Challenge Fire Pump, with lOin. bucket and jdiuiger
pumps, and 14in. steam cylinder.
431 J. Woodrow & Sons, Stockport; 13, Market-street,
Manchester; 42, Cornhill, London; 18, Castle-street,
Liverpool.
The Process of Making Silk Hats. The Process of Making
Fine Fur Felt Hats, both hard and soft, by hand and machinery.
432 CooDBRAND AND HOLLAND, 20, Market Place, Manchester.
Testing Machinery for Cotton and other Textiles. Inventions
for Cotton Spinners, and other Textile Manufacturers. Engine
Recorders.
433 Harling AND Todd, Calder Foundry, Burnley.
Fancy Loom, with patent 4-shuttle drop box motion and 16-shaft
dobby. Looms for jeans, twills, sateens, and velvets.
434 Henry Pease & Co.’s Successors, The Mills, Darlington.
Power Loom in operation weaving dress goods. Samples of
Cross Warp Serges and Cashmeres.
435 George Keighley, Bankhouse Iron Works, Burnley.
Plain High-speed Calico Loom. Strong Calico Loom with twill
motion. Sateen and Worsted Loom.
436 Platt Brothers & Co., Limited, Hartford Works,
Oldham.
Cotton Machinery for Preparing, Spinning, and Weaving, com-
l)i’ising Patent Double Roller Macarth}" Cotton Gin, for woolly seeds.
Bale Breaker, for breaking up cotton from the bale, and distributing
the same to any part of the mixing room. Patent Exhaust Opener
and Lap Machine, for 40in. cards. This machine draws its cotton
from any part of the room in which it works, or from another room,
cleaning the cotton and making it into a lap. Single Scutcher for
40in. cards, with lattice arranged for four laps, and Platt’s Improved
Pedal Regulator. Single Card, 40in. on wire, by 50in. diameter,
and 89 self-stripping flats l|in. broad, with dish and roller feed.
Single Card, 40in. on wire, by 50in. diameter, and 89 self-strip-
ping flats, l|iu. broad, with two feed rollers covered with
])atent inserted wire. Heilmann’s Combing Machine for 8 laps,
lOJin. wide, new pattern solid base plate, with cut cam for detaching.
108
SECTION II.
Freemautle’s Patent Brush Motion, interchangeable segments for
circular combs, coiler and can motion, for cans 36in. by 9in., stop
motion for each sliver behind tlie draw-box, stop motion in coiler
cover, stop motion when can is full, making 80 to 95 nips per minute.
Drawing Frame, three heads of two deliveries each, with traverse
motion, various kinds of top clearers, viz., iron flats, with stationary
cloth, Ermen’s patent revolving self-stripping clearer, and iron flats
for revolving cloths, loose boss top rollers to front row, also loose bush
top rollers, tumbler stop motions at the back, stop motion between
the front rollers and calenders, stop motion when cans are full,
motion to traverse tumblers, weight relieving motion. The front and
second rows of bottom fluted rollers are case-hardened. Slubbing Frame,
30 spindles, lOiu. lift, bobbins 5|in. diametei’, when full, 20 Jin. staff,
spindles 36iu. long, Jfiu. diameter, common collars 5Jin. long, double
centrifugal presses, dividing plates, locking apparatus to knocking-off
motion. Marsh’s patent footsteps, loose boss top rollers to front row.
The first and second rows of bottom fluted rollers are case-hardened.
Intermediate Frame, 42 spindles,. lOin. lift, bobbins 4|in. diameter
when full, 2 6 fin. staff, spindles 3 Gin. by |in.. Mason’s long collars,
single centrifugal pressers, loose boss top rollers for the front row,
locking apparatus. The first and second rows of bottom fluted rollers
are case-hardened. Roving Frame, 60 spindles. Tin. lift, bobbins 3|in.
diameter when full, ^bison’s long collars, 20Jin. staff, spindles 30in. by
-|in. , single centrifugal pressers, locking apparatus, loose boss top rollers to
the front row. The first and second rows of bottom fluted rollers are
case-hardened. AVai-p Ring Spinning Frame, 124 spindles, 5in. lift,
2 Jin. distance, IJiu. diameter inside ring, with patent flexible
spindle , thread board adjustable for anti-ballooning, rod for caiTyiug
doffing tin, patent creel, two tin rollers lOin. diameter, loose boss top
rollers to front row. Front row of bottom fluted rollers are case-
hardened. Patent Weft Ring Spinning Frame, 140 spindles, 2 Jin.
distance, diameter inside the ring, to spin weft cops on bare
spindle, or on short or long paper tubes, patent ring and traveller,
patent doffing motion, patent creel, thread board to lift with ring
rail, two tin rollers lOiu. diameter, loose boss top rollers to front row.
Front row of bottom fluted rollers are case-hardened. Self-acting
Cotton Mule, 132 spindles, Ifin. distance, ITin. spindles, 64in.
stretch, speciallj" adapted for medium counts, all three lines of
bottom fluted rollers are case-hardened, loose boss top rollers to front
row, Avith traA'elling scavengers, patent rope tightening apparatus to
rope taking in, scroll band tightening frame, patent clip for fastening
scroll bands, click locking motion, patent automatic nosing motion,
backing-off chain tightening motion. Palmer’s patent step covei’s on
left-hand side, and Travis’s patent cover on right side, double earners
at the headstock, three-gi’ooA'ed rim band aiTangement, casehardened
tin roller arbors IJin. diameter, Blamire’s patent plate bolsters. Cop
Reel for 10 hanks. Plain Calico Loom, 42in. reed space, overpick,
iron yarn and back rollers, weft stop motion, positive taking-up
motion, CoAvburn and Peck’s patent positive easing motion, self-
acting double-capped temples, Singleton’s patent loose reed, chain
weighting for yarn beam. Fustian or Velvet Loom, 56in. reed space,
MACHINERY.
<
i
Sc
«
iron back roller and wood yarn roller, weft stop motion, worm
taking-up motion, patent temples, Clegg’s picking motion, chain
weighting for yarn beam, Nuttall’s patent oscillating tappits, 10
shafts, Shiers and Wright’s patent system of driving oscillating
tappits, patent governing chain, which enables a long pattern to be
woven with a short bowl chain. Worsted Machinery for Combing,
Drawing, Roving, Spinning, and Weaving, comprising Screw Gill
Lap Machine, one head of one delivery, to make laps
for Little and Eastwood’s Circular Wool-combing Machine.
Little and Eastwood’s Patent Circular AVool Combing Machine,
3ft. Sin. circle, with coiler and can motion, for combing Colonial and
South American wool. Screw Gill Balling Machine, one head of two
deliveries, to make two balls, for finishing after combing. First
Drawing Frame, 4 boxes, 8 porcupines, 4 bobbins, for preparing
worsted on the French system. Second Drawing Frame, 4 boxes,
8 porcupines, 4 bobbins, for preparing worsted on the French system.
Slubbing Frame, 4 boxes, 8 porcupines, 8 bobbins, for preparing
worsted oif the French system. Roving Frame, 4 boxes, 8 porcupines,
8 bobbins, for preparing roving bobbins for the self-acting mule, on
the French system. Self-acting Worsted Mule, 110 spindles, ly^^in.
distance, 17in. spindle, 63in. stretch, all four lines of bottom-fluted
rollers case-hardened, patent rope band tightening apparatus to the
rope taking-in, scroll band tightening frame, patent clip for fastening
scroll bands, click-locking motion, patent automatic nosing motion,
backing-off chain tightening motion (special arrangements are made
by which the spindles can be driven either twist or weft way without
cutting either the spindle bands or rim band). Palmer’s patent step
covers, double carriers at the headstock, four grooved rim band
aiTangemeiit, case-hardened tin roller arbors l;|in. diameter, anti-
friction bowls for faller shaft, plate bolsters and footsteps on right
side, and pipe bolsters and steps on left-hand side. Power Loom to
weave fancy woollen and worsted goods. Low pattern, with lathe
centre at the bottom of the loom, 96in. reed space, with four shuttle
boxes on each side, jacquard for 28 shafts, fitted with ungearing and
reversing motions for turning back the loom to the broken weft
without moving the shuttles, patent weft stop motion, worm and
wheel letting-off motion, balance taking-up motion, single roller
temple, wood-legged yarn and cloth beams. Gin. wrought-iron tube
back roller, wood shuttles. Machinery for Preparing, Spinning,
Doubling, and AA^’eaving AVool, comprising one Single Scribbler, 48in.
on wire, with hand-feed, patent covered feed rollers, 2in. diameter ;
burr roller, 12in. diameter ; guard roller and dirt box, angle stripper,
4in. diameter ; cylinder, 50in. diameter ; 6 workers, 8in. diameter ;
6 strippers, 2in. diameter; fancy, 12in. diameter; doffer, 30in.
diameter ; fly comb, and balling machine. Single Clearer, 48in.
on wire, with bank feed, heck or sliver guide, plain feed rollers, 2in.
diameter ; taker-in. Gin. diameter ; angle stripper. Sin. diameter ;
cylinder, SOin. diameter ; G workers, 8in. diameter ; G strippers, 2in.
diameter; fancy, 12in. diameter; doffer, 30in. diameter; fly comb,
roping apparatus or side drawing for Scotch feed. Single Carder,
48in. on wdre, wdth Scotch feeder, plain feed rollers, 2in. diameter ;
m
no
SECTION IT.
t«\ker-in, Gin. diameter ; angle stripper, 5in. diameter ; cylinder, 50in.
diameter; 6 A\orkers, 8in. diameter; 6 strippers, 2in. diameter;
fancy, 12in. diameter ; doffer, 30in. diameter ; Gy comb, and Bolette’s
patent steel tape eondenser, with Platt’s patented improvements for
100 good and two waste threads on four bobbins of 25 threads
per bobbin. Grinding Machine for 48in. cards, with movable
l)earings, adapting it to any less width of card. Self-acting
Woollen Mnle, 100 spindles, 2in. distance, 18in. spindle, 72in. to
76Mn. stretch, with patent rope tightening apparatus to rope
taking-in, patent nosing motion, double speed and drawback motion,
double speed at any part of draw, stop motion, spindle stop motion,
plate bolsters for left side and pipe bolsters for right side, ease-
liardened tin roller arbors IJin. diameter, coupling spindle in
headstock and tin roller shaft in square can be removed witliout
removing the rollers. Woollen Doubler, 24 spindles, 4in. distance,
24in. staff, 2|-in. rings, for plain and limey yarns, including spotting,
intermittent, yM’ii looping, and variable spinning motions.
437 liowARD AND BuLLOUGH, Globe Works, Accrington.
Single Beater Scutcher, with adjustable air bars. Revolving
Flat Carding Engines, with electrical adjustment of flats to cylinder at
speed. Drawing Frame, with electric stop motions. Slnbbing and one
Intermediate, with electric stop motion. Roving Frame, with new
differential motion. Ring Throstle for Twist. Ring Throstle for
Weft. Ring Frame for Doubling. Slasher Sizing Machine, 7ft. and
4ft. c^dinders of copper.
438 J. S. Fry & Sons, Bristol ; and 252, City-road, London.
Chocolate and Cocoa. The manufacture of chocolate c n-
fectionery illustrated by machinery in motion.
439 James Broughton & Co., Dutton-street Iron Works,
Diitt on-street. New Bridge-street, Manchester.
Three-bowl Lever Friction Calender, with one bottom iron bowl
20in. diameter. Chilled-iron Cylinder Bowl, 13in. diameter, arranged
for heating by steam. White Cotton-paper Bowl, 22in. diameter,
and 42in. long on working face, driving gear consisting of large si)ur
wheel and pinion, countershaft, expanding cones 36in. diameter.
Brown Paper and a Raw Cotton Bowl, partly in the rough and partly
finished, illustrating the process of manufacture. Samples of Brown
Bowl Paper, White Linen do., and White Cotton do. Samples of
Bowl Cotton and Raw Bowl Cotton.
440 Bobert Broadbent k Son, Phoenix Iron Works,
Stalyhridge.
Warburton and Broadbent’s Patent Drum Winding Frame, with
conical drums on one side and parallel di-uins on tlie other side,
fitted with Broadbent’s patent lever traverse motion, patent
carrier springs, and patent stop-motion. One case of Loose Boss
Top Rollers.
MACHINERY.
Ill
442 Crichton and Sons, Castlefield Iron Works, Knot
Mill, Manchester.
Express Roving Frame (Higgins’s princi])le) of GO s])in(lles, v’itli
patent long collars and patent swivel attachments to rails. Ro})hin
Tin. by 3-^ in.
443 Samuel Brooks, Union Iron Works, West Gorton,
Manchester.
Automatic Lemaire Feeder, for woollen and worsted cards.
Drawing Frame for Cotton, Ac., one head of tlirce deliveries; foin-
lines of Anted rollers; IGin. gauge; coiling, can-tnrning, and
Brooks’s patented front and back sliver; back knocking-oA’ can-Alling,
and traverse motions ; inm Aats for stationary cloth, hjose boss rollers,
weight-relieving motion, Ac., complete. Ring Spinning Frame f)i*
Weft, containing 68 spindles, 2 Jin. gange, 1 Jin. rings, 5in. lift, self-
contained Union spindles for high speeds, and springs on for holding
spindles in position ; two tin rollers, lOin. diameter, three lines Anted
rollers mounted in inclined stands, all three rows top rollers weighted
by saddle, lever, and weight; front line rollers loose boss ; two-height
creel for single roving ; patent thread board lifting motion for
instantaneously turning up all the thread boards for doAing ; patent
knocking-off motion for automatically stopping frame when pirns are
full ; patent travelling thread guide ; revolving clearers, with patent
adjustable Axings on one side frame, and patent travelling cone
clearer on the other side ; rope driving and tension pulleys for driven
tin roller ; girder rail and angle beam ; lifting motion by bowls and
chains. Ring Spinning Frame for Warp, containing 60 spindles, 2|in.
gauge, l|in. rings, 5 in. lift, self-contained Union spindles for high
speeds ; front top rollers weighted by hooks and weights, and second
and back row self-weighted ; front row rollers, loose boss ; patent
anti-ballooning apparatus ; patent Anger bar and wires for holding-
down wharves, ami motion to release all at one time for oiling ; rope
driving and tension pulleys for driven tin roller ; girder rails and
angle beams ; lever-lifting motion. Ring Doidjling Frame for Sewing-
Cottons ; one side arranged on the Scotch system, and one side on the
English system, 58 spindles, 2|in, gauge, 2in. rings, 4in. lift ; patent
Ferguslie and union spindles for high speeds, and improved springs
on for holding spindles in position ; 2Jin. diameter hollow brass
bottom rollers, solid top rollers covered with brass, and on Scotch
system, rollers working in copper troughs so as to be partially
immersed in water, with lifting motion to raise rollers when cleaning the
trough, and on English system with trough behind rollers, and motion
to lift glass rods out of trough for cleaning; patent tapering motion;
two-height porcupine creel; two tin rollers, lOin. diameter; rope driving
and tension pulleys for driven tin roller; girder rails, Ac., complete.
Ring Doubling Frame, for two or three fold, with patent automatic
stop motion for each end, to stop both spindle and delivering roller
simultaneously, 52 spindles, 3|in. gauge, 2Jin. rings, 4|in. lift, self-
contained spindles, Rabbeth system ; two tin rollers, lOin.
%
i
%
is
diameter, and with rope driving and tension pulleys for driven tin
roller; solid bottom rollers, Ifin. diameter, plain polished; solid
top roller. Sin. diameter, plain polished ; cop creel, etc., complete.
Ring Doubling Frame for Wool, with trap motion, 52 spindles, 3 Jin.
gauge, 2Jin. rings, 4Jin. lift, union spindles for high speed, and im-
proved springs on for holding spindles in position; two tin rollers, lOin.
diameter; vertical trap rollers, covered with leather, 2 Jin. diameter,
with special trap spindle, and 4Jin. diameter tin rollers ; porcupine
creel for two bobbins to each spindle ; rope driving and tension
pulleys for driven tin roller. Hill and Brown’s Patent Winding
Frame, to wind yarn on to paper tubes or bobbins without heads, 12
drums ; one side fitted with creel for winding two or more ends on to
one parallel spool. Sin. traverse, with patent automatic stop motion
to each end, and one side for winding from one end ; parallel and
conical spools, 2 in. and 4in. traverse ; creel arranged to wind from
cops, bobbins, and hanks. American Standard Spinning and
Doubling Travellers, in steel and composition, of the various shapes
and sorts used on the Ring system of spinning and doubling. Show
Case containing Samples of Bobbins, Single and Double Yarn, Spools,
wound on the Hill and Brown Winding Frame, Crochet and Sewing
Cotton Balls, made on the Ferguslie Balling Machine, various sizes of
Rings, assorted Spindles, patented and otherwise. Loom Temples,
Wrap Reel, double traverse. Yarn Quadrant, Improved Hygrometer,
Hank Indicatoi-s, Oil • Measures andPumps, Spindle Speed Indicatoi-s,
Samples of Round Top Clearers and Walkers’ Patent Fixings, Fluted
Rollers for drawing and spinning frames Brass Covered Rollem
for doubling frames. Patent Ante-Ballooning Apparatus, general
accessories, itc.
4
I
I
444 Samuel Walker, Eagle
near Manchester.
and Atlas Works, Radcliffe,
Single Carding Engine 40in. on the wire ; cylinder, 48in.
diameter ; doffer, 2 Gin. ; 6 rollers Gin. diameter, 5 clearers 3 Jin.
diameter ; 2 dirt rollers 8Jin. diameter, licker-in, 9in. diameter ;
fancy roller, 9in. diameter, to work underneath the cylindei’, adjust-
able mote knife, self-lubricating combstock drawbox, with 2 lines of
rollers, coder for cans 3Gin. by lOin., dish-feeder with 2 Jin. rollers,
and solid baywood covers. Drawing frame : Head with 4 deliveries
and 4 lines of rollers, gauge of frame 14|in., with coilers for cans
3Gin. by 9in., with all stopping motions for back and front, and also
for stopping the frame when the cans are full. Cast-iron top
clearers with loose wood linings, loose boss top rollers for the front
line. Roving frame with 5G spindles, bobbins Tin. by 3Jin., with
Mason’s collars, gauge, 8 spindles in 20Jin., si)indles 33Jin. b}’ yjin.,
Bodden’s single centrifugal pressers to flyers, loose boss rollers to the
front top line. Ring, Frame with 72 spindles Gin. lift and 2|in. gauge,
rings Ijin. diameter, Bodden’s self-oiling rabbeth spindles, 2 tin
rollers lOin. diameter, revolving top and under-clearers with improved
bearings.
>' '«n'. fM^ fa^^^g^faag^fag^
MACHTNERY.
113
446
445 John Musgrave & Sons, Limited, Globe Iron Works,
Bolton.
Horizontal Compound Steam Engine, 4ft. stroke high-pressure
cylinder 21in. diameter, low-pressure cylinder 37in. diameter,^ htted
with Musgrave’s patent traversing Corliss valves, automatic slip
motion and quick speed governor, fly rope drum 20ft. diameter,
grooved for fifteen IJin. ropes, Whitworth hollow compressed fluid
Iteel crank shaft and crank pin. The engine is prepared for the
application of condensing apparatus. Taming or Barring Engines,
Avith Musgrave’s patent automatic safety apparatus.
John Greenhalgh & Sons, Vulcan Iron Works,
Oldham.
Patent Self-acting Flake and Delivery Willow for cleaning
cotton waste, &c. Patent Self-acting Rope-opemng Machine, with
cutter attached.
Fawcett, Preston & Co., Phoenix Foundry, 17, York-
street, Liverpool.
Copper Vacuum Pan and Vertical Vacuum Engine, for evaporat-
ing or concentrating liquids at low temperature.
John Horrocks & Son, Parker-street Mill, Ashley-
lane, Manchester.
Patent Stop-motion Doubling Winding Machine.
William Crosland, New-street, Miles Platting,
Chester.
447
448
449
Man-
Patent Advance Self-clamp Paper Cutting Madiine.
Thumb-hole, and Universal Cutting Machine. Boiler
Machine. Millboard and Pasteboard Cutting Machine.
Corner-
Scoring
449a James Saville & Sons, Adelphi Bowl Works, Black-
burn-street, Adel phi, Salford.
Cotton and Paper Bowls, Brass and Chilled Iron Bowls, Paper
Friction Pulley, Pot Eyes.
450 Joseph Armytage Wade, Hornsea, neai Hull.
A Helical Centrifugal Pump. By the addition of a powerful
screw filling a cylinder, which conveys water from the tail pipe to one g
or both sides of a centrifugal disc, very superior results c^e obtained |
in the depth below the shaft from which water may be drawn-this
has under favourable circumstances reached 3^ft. 8m. and con-
sequently in the output of the water. An Eccentric Grip to a lever,
holding firmly without the aid of a screw or of notches, and avoiding
both danger and noise.
450a The Allen Machine Co., Limited, Victory Works,
Halifax, England.
Gumming Machines. Gumolene. Specimens of Electro-
Bronzing and Nickel Plating.
sv
s*'
114
SECTION II.
450b The Patent Heald and Eyelett Machine Co., Wm.
Bateman, Secretary, 63, Church-street, Manchester.
This Exhibit is worked by John Heywood, Official Printer and Bookbinder.
Machine for Folding and Eyeletting Labels for luggage and
other purposes.
451 W. C. Horne, 6, Dowgate-hill,Cannon-street,London,E.C.
This Exhibit is worked by John Heywood, Official Printer and Bookbinder.
Martini Patent Folding Machine. Smyth Patent Book-sewing
Machine. Harper Patent Wire-stitching Machine. Horne’s Patent
Rolling and Wrappering Machine for newspapers and journals.
Gathering Machine for sections of books. Archer Patent Paper
Feeding Machine. Pepe Cold Process Matrice Drying Machine.
Patent Luminous Cards, Balmain’s patent for printing-machine work
452 Augustus Brehmer, 33 and 35, Moor-lane, London, E.C.
This Exliibit is worked by John Heywood, Official Printer and Bookbinder.
Machines for seAving and stitching books and pamphlets with
wire or thread.
453 John Galloway, 14, Charlotte-street, Manchester.
Model of Pole Press. Model of Munich Lever Press. ]\Iodel of
Star Cylinder Press. 16in. Modern Lithographic Press. Double Crown
Lithographic Machine. Ink Slab, Stones, and sundries.
454 Furnival & Co., E eddish Ironworks, Eeddish, near
Stockport.
This Exhibit is worked by John Heywood, Official Printer and Bookbinder.
Double Royal Wharfedale Printing Machine, with Flyers, for
jobbing and fine bookwork. Half-Demy Wharfedale Printing Machine,
with Flyers, specially built to run at a high speed. Quad-Crown
Lithographic Printing Machine, for fine chromos and oleographs.
Self-clamp Guillotine Cutting Machine. Foolscap-Folio Caxton
Platen Printing Machine.
455 The Model Printing Press Co., 3, Liidgate Circus
Buildings, London, E.C.
Treadle and Hand-lever Printing ^lachines. Guillotine Paper
Cutters. Little Giant and Model Brass Rule and Lead Cutters.
Rotary Mitreing Machines. Wire Binders and Stitching Machines.
Pateut Twin Quoins. Gauge, or Laying-on Pins. Printing
Materials.
456 Taylor, Garnett, & Co., Manchester Guardian Office,
3, Cross-street, Manchester.
Buxton, Braithwaite, k Smith’s Patent Single-cylinder (Wiiarfe-
dale) Perfecting Machines, and Buxton, Braithwaite, ct Smith’s
Guardian Patent Duplex Fast Folding Machines.
456a James Salmon, Blackfriars Bridge, Manchester, and
60, Friday-street, Cheapside, London, E.C.
48in. Victory Patent Self-Clamp Guillotine Cutting Machine. Four-
Crown Guardian Duplex Folding Machines, Buxton, Braithwaite,
F
MACHTNP]RY
and Smith’s Patent. Double-Demy Patent Wharfedale, fitted
with Mark Smith’s Patent Taking-ofF Apparatus. Demy Patent
Wharfedale, fitted with Salmon, Smith, & Co.’s Patent Taking-off
Apparatus. Crown Folio Mitre Platen Alachine. Salmon’s Improved
Treadle Disc Paging Machine. Salmon’s Improved Treadle Lightning
Paging Machine. Hand Lever Paging Machine. Salmon’s 30in.
Treadle Perforating Machine. lOin. Hand Lever Perforating
Machine. Patent Automatic Wire Stitching Machine for Books.
Hand Lever Wire Stitching Machine for Books. Hand Lever
Automatic Wiring Stapling Press for Books. Patent Lightning
Box Wiring Machine. Box iVIakers’ Cornering Machine. Rotary
Treadle Scoring Machine. Millboard Cutting Machine. Specimens
of Letterpress and Lithographic Inks, manufactured by the London
and Provincial Printing Ink Co. Specimens of Dry Colours, manu-
factured by the London and Provincial Printing Ink Co.
457 Alex. Seggie & Son, Broughton Engineering Works,
Edinburgh.
Horrocks & Co.’s Chromo-Lithographic Work, on Quad -Crown
Edinburgh Machine.
458 G. Mann & Co., Elland-road Works, Leeds.
Double-Demy Wharfedale Climax Letterpress Machine, with
flyer, oscillating geared riders, and cylinder check ; double rolling
and fly elevating arrangement. Double-Demy Climax Lithographic
Machine, with Wharfedale flyers, damping apparatus, &c. ; also with
cylinder brake and diagonal rolling arrangement.
458a McCorquodale & Co., Limited, Printers, Chromo-
Lithographers, Account Book Manufacturers, &c.,
Leeds, Newton-le- Willows, and London.
Letterpress Printing from Blocks, Electros, &c. LitliogTaphic
Printing, Colour and Commercial, with various specimens of the same.
458b Irvin and Sellers, Preston and Liverpool.
Bobbins and Shuttles used in spinning and manufacturing
cotton, flax, silk, and wool,
light and bell manufacturers.
Hardwood Turnery used by electric
Specimens of American Sawn Woods
and Foreign Hardwood Logs used in the manufacture of the above.
459 Smith, Barber, k Earn worth, 37, Fountain-street,
Manchester.
Letter-press Printing. *
459a H. Garside, 21 , Cannon-street, Manchester.
Collection of Photographs of Machiner}'.
4G0 John Neill, Great John-street, Manchester.
Chromo-Lithographic and Letterpress Printing Machinery.
460a John Ingham k Sons, Croft Head Works, Thornton,
near Bradford.
Shuttles and Pickers for the weaving of worsteds, cottons, silks,
alpacas, mohairs, ribbons, flax, linens, carpets, woollens, worsteds,
coatings, blankets, fustians, lastings, damasks, moreens, tire , (tc.
Shuttle Pikes for spools, pirns, and cops.
460b Abraham Kershaw & Son, Brow Mill, Clayton,
Bradford, Yorkshii
e.
Reeds and Healds for weaving textile fabrics.
461 John Batcliff & Sons, Junction Foundry, Upper
Wortley, Leeds.
Donble-Demy Lithographic Printing Machine.
461a Horrocks & Co., Town Hall Works, Ashton-under-Lyne.
Specimens of EngTaving and Colour Printing.
Bookbindino-.
Embossing.
461b James and Aaron Wilkinson, 6, St. Oswald-street,
Bochdale-road, Manchester.
Shuttles for weaving cotton, silk, worsted, linen, jute, ribbon,
small wares, &c. ; also Picking Sticks and Pirn Bobbins.
462 Thos. Thomas k Sons, Acme Hoist Works, Cardiff.
Self-sustaining Hoisting Machinery. Passenger Elevator, to cany
four pei'sons, shown at work conveying visitors to and from the
galleries of this section. Hand-power Single Warehoiise Lift. Hand-
power Single Dinner Lift. Single Grocer’s Sack Lift. Double
Grocer’s Sack Lift. Denick Winch for one ton direct from the
banel. Hoistinjr Crab for one ton direct from the banel.
462a
Thomas Crompton, Lock and Hinge Manufacturer,
Ashton, near W^igan.
Best Wrought Welded Iron Hinges for shipbuilders’, locomotive
engineers’, and general builders’ requirements. Gothic Ornamental
Scroll Hinges for ecclesiastical work. Banbuiy Stock and Plate
Locks, suitable for churches and general builders. ’ Strong Handles
and Thumb Latches.
Luke and Spencer, Limited, Lime Bank Works, Lime
Bank-street, Ashton Old-road, Ardwick, Manchester.
Grinding Machines, with emery discs, as follows : Automatic
Surfacing Machine, 36in. Double Tool Grinder, with Twist Drill
attachment, etc. ; Self-acting Wheel Tooth Cleaning Machine, Saw
Sharpening Machine, Automatic Wood-plane Iron Grinder, Universal
Grinders, Horizontal Grinder, Automatic Machine for Grinding Chilled
Rolls.
yi
463a Thos. Bradbukn & Sons, Great Charles-street,
Birmingham.
Rules in Boxwood, Ivory and Steel. Squares, Iron and Steel.
Measuring Tapes, wind-up and spring.
464 Kendall and Gent, Victoria Works, Manchester.
Brown’s Patent Screwing Machine, to screw bolts and tap nuts
up to 2in. diameter, and fitted with new patent automatic; relaxing
motion. One ditto, to screw up to IMn. diameter. Tin. Centre
Open-spindle Capstan Rest Chasing Lathe, for making screws and
studs up to l^in. diameter from the solid bar. Sin. Centre Hollow
Spindle Lathe for turning and chasing screws, Ac., up to 2in.
diameter. Universal Milling Machines B and C sizes. Vertical
Milling and Profiling Machine, B size. lOin. Centre Duplex Sliding,
Surfacing, and Screw-Cutting Lathe, with 14ft. gap bed. Raw-
linson’s Patent Mechanical Grindstone. Rawlinson’s Patent Tool-
holders. Tin. Centre Brass Finisher’s Lathe, specially adapted for
boring, turning, facing, and screwing all kinds of brass fittings
whether parallel or taper. Cutter Grinding Machine, for milling
cutters of various forms. Cutter Forming Machine, for making
milling cutters of any section. Vertical Drilling and Tapping-
Machine.
464a Frank Redd a way & Co., Cheltenham - street,
Pendleton, Manchester.
Camel-hair Machine Belting. A belt made from animal fibre
warp and vegetable fibre weft. Cotton Canvas Belting made from
union canvas. Canvas Hose for fire brigades, Ac.
465 John Pickles & Son, Royd Iron Works, Hebden
Bridge, via Manchester.
Wood Planing Machines, with Rawling’s Patent Spiral Cutters
and Grinders. Wood Planing and Surfacing Machine. Cutter
Grinding Machine. Circular Saw Bench, with patent saw guard.
465a R. W. Harrison & Co., 48 and 50, Darwen-street,
Blackburn ; works, St. Peter-street.
Steam Packings of all kinds. Diamond Star Patent Engine
Packings. Jointings. Belting Syrup and Asbestos.
466 Thomas Robinson & Son,
Rochdale.
Roller Feed Saw Bench, with foot lever for moving feed roller.
Tenoning Machine, with double tenoning arrangement and light
scribing apparatus. Combined Hand and Power Feed Planing
Machine. Hand-feed Planing Machine with outside block 4in. wide,
for moulding, and fitted with sawing apparatus. Band-sawing
Machine fitted with wheels of the bicycle pattern. Dovetailing
Machine. Self-acting Grinding Machine for plane irons. Moulding
Limited, Railway Works
I
'$
ie
n
Machine with top bloclc to cant,
cutter blocks,
reversing chisel. Double Horizontal Roller Mill
smooth rollers for flour, &c.
Panel Planing Machine with side
Mortising and Boring Machine fitted with automatic
O O
fitted with four
467 Sharp, Stewart k Co., Limited, Atlas Works, Man-
chester.
Planing Machine, to plane 10ft. long, 4ft. wide, and 4ft. high,
with three toolboxes, and improved feedgear. Screwing Machine to
screw and tap from 4in. to Ifin., with Taps, Dies, Master Taps, etc.
lOin. Self-acting, Sliding, Surfacing, and Screw-entting, Gap Lathe,
with bed 10ft. long. A selection of injectors, viz., Patent Exhaust
Steam Injectors, high and low pressure ; Friedmann’s Patent Non-
lifting Injectors for Locomotives; Atlas Pattern Live Steam
Injectors ; Standard Pattern Live Steam Injectors ; A Sectional
Model of Patent Exhaust Steam Injector.
468 Hulse & Co., Ordsal Works, Regent Bridge, Salford,
Manchester.
Hollow Spindle Turning and Screwing Lathe, with capstan rest,
Broad Traverse Planing Machine. Vertical Drilling and Boring
Machine. Radial Drilling and Boring Machine. Vertical Milling
and Drilling Machine, with numerous automatic and reversing
actions. Horizontal Milling Machine, with self-acting table. Self-
acting Wheel-cutting and Dividing Machine, for cutting spur, bevel,
or worm wheels. Swivel Tool-holders and Cutters. Surface Plates,
Ac.
468a W. B. White, Red Scar Spring Works, Colne,
Lancashire.
AVeft Forks and Fork-nolders. Shuttle Pegs and Guards.
Shuttle Pikes. Spring Swells. Tempered Steel Springs. Perforated
Sheets and Strips. Picking Balls. Studs and Sticks. Cop Skewers.
AVeft Grates. Springs and Spindles. Patent Oil Cisterns.
468b Robert Pickles, Cairo Mill and Buccleuch Mill,
Burnley.
Patent Shuttles and Samples of AA'ood used for shuttles. Samples
of AVood after being subjected to a pressure of 1,500 tons, or 20 tons
to the square inch.
469 R. & J. Dick, Greenhead Works, Glasgow.
The Process of Alanufacturing Round and Flat Driving Bands,
made of a combination of gutta-percha, balata, and cotton canvas. The
process of making Boots and Shoes with gutta-percha and balata
bottoms. The Manufacture of A^entilating Inside Soles for boots and
shoes. A general exhibit of Gutta-percha Articles of our own
manufacture, including Shoes and Pads for Horses, Buckets, and
other Colliery Furnishings; Golf and Cricket Balls, Ac., Ac. ; also the
Maiiufiicture of a new Patent AVaterproof Cotton Sole for boots and
shoes. A varied collection of raw material.
Ml;
MACHINERY.
119
4G9a William Cowan, Buccleudi-street Works, Edinburgh.
Meter for measuring water and other liquids.
& Son, Clarendon-street, Hyde, near
470 John Cowley
Manchester.
Screwing Macliines for gas and steam tubes ; Screwing Machines
for bolts and nuts ; Screwing Machines for square threads ; Selection
of Engineers’ and Gas and Steam Fitters’ Tools
471 Joshua Heap & Co., Limited, Oldham Hoad Engineers’
Tool Works, Ashton-under-Lyne.
Portable Screwing Machines for tubes. Portable Screwing
Machines with fitters’ work-bench on wheels. Engineers’ and Gas
and Steam Fitters’ Hand Tools and Screwing Tackle. Bolt Screwing
and Nut Tapping Machines.
65, Sackville-street, Portland-street,
472 Doavning & Co.,
Manchester.
Corks and Corkwood. Wine, Ale and Porter Corking, Filling,
Bottle Washing, and Capsuling Machine. Ca])sules, Sealing AYax,
Bottle Brushes, Tin and Wood Tops, and all trade sundries.
473 Bbadbuky & Co., Limited, Wellington Works, Oldham,
and 7, Deansgate, Manchester.
Rotary Shuttle Sewing Machines, ' wheel-feed for leather work.
Rotary Shuttle Sewing Machine, step-feed, for tailoring and manu-
facturing purposes. Repairing Machine, for repairing boots and shoes,
and sewing elastics in boots. Capstan Lathes Sin. and Tin. centres.
Single Speed Milling Machine. Spindle Bench Drilling Machine.
Steam Power Bench, with driving tackle complete, for working above-
named sewing machines.
474 J. Bennett Yon der Heyde, Bridgewater Chambers,
6, BroAvn -street, Manchester.
Perfect Pulley. Adjustable Ball and Socket Shaft Hangers.
Friction Coupling, Shafting, and other fittings.
475 J. S. AND G. F. Simpson, 26 to 36, Bodney-street,
Brooklyn, E.D., N.Y., U.S.A ; sole agents, Cunning-
ham Shaw & Co., Liverpool.
Bogardus Original Universal Eccentric Mill, with guide pulley
attachment. Ditto, with bevel gearing. Ditto, with Guide Pulley
attachment. Countershaft.
476 William Teggin, 58, Faulkner-street, Manchester.
Process of Letterpress and Lithograpliic Printing and Label
Punching'.
120
SECTION II.
477 S. CHARLES^yoRTH k Co., Richmond Hill Iron Works,
Oldham.
Demy AdYance Lithographic Printing Machine. Kleinertz
Patent Bronzing Machine. Kleinertz Patent Dusting Machine.
478 J. E. H. Andrew k Co., Limited, Reddish, near Stock-
port, and 80, Queen A^ictoria-street, London, E.C.
Stockport Patent Silent Gas Engines (Horizontal). One Jh-p.
Bisschop Patent Gas Engine, vertical type.
479 Robert Dempster k Sons, Rosemount Iron Works,
Elland, Yorkshire.
Gas Engines (Campbeirs patent).
480 W. II. 4Yrrance, 19 k 20, North Bruntsfield Place,
Edinburgh.
Scotch Bakery. Rusks, sweetened and unsweetened. Kettledrum
Shortbread, Kettledrum Oatcakes, Kettledrum Gingerbread.
481 Lee and Hunt, Arkwright Tool Works, Nottingham.
Self-acting Cold Iron and Steel Sawing Machine, with saw 24in.
diameter, to crosscut joist section up to 24in. by 6in. and round or
square bars up to 5Jin. and with quick return motion. Cold Iron
and Steel Sawing Machine, with saw 12in. diameter, to crosscut
joist section up to lOin. by 3in., and round or square bars up to
2 Jin., with hand feed. Universal Self-acting Milling Machine, with
2ft. traverse to table.
482 Hind and Lund, Atlas Works, Ed ward-street, Preston.
Paint Grinding Roller Mill, having three granite rolls, 30in.
in length by 14in. diameter. Pug or Paint Mixing Mill. Liquid
Paint Mixing and Grinding Mill.
483 Craven Bros., Limited, Vauxhall Iron Works, Osborne-
street, Manchester.
Sawing Machine, for cutting metals cold, diameter of saw 1ft. 9in.,'.
traverse 1ft. 3in., table 4ft. 6in. by 3ft. Sawing Machine, for cutting
rising heads off steel castings, ingots, &c., diameter of saw 8ft., traverse
3ft. 2in., table 7ft. by 6ft. Sawing Machine, for cutting rising heads
off steel castings, ingots, Ac., diameter of saw 1ft. 9in., traverse bin.,
table 2ft. 9in. by 1ft. Gin. Vertical Drilling and Boring Machine,
will admit 4ft. diameter, 2Jin. spindle, with chasing arrangement
on spindle. Universal Horizontal Milling Machine, for general work,
with rising and falling table. Vertical Milling and Drilling Machine,
for locomotive engine cylinders and general work. Self-acting Sliding,
Surfacing and Screw-cutting Gap Lathe, lOin. centres, 10ft. bed.
Face Lathe, with 30in. diameter, jaw chuck, duplex compound slide
rests. Group' of Four Machines for making boiler fire box stay
bolts, consisting of Cuttiiig-ofl Machine, Straightening and Centreing
Machine, Slide Lathe, with copying motion, and Automatic Chasing
Lathe. Slotting Machine, with traversing head, 15in. stroke, 5ft.
diameter table; all self-acting, adapted for slotting radial axle box
frames and general locomotive work. Railway Wheel Lathe, for carriage
and wagon wheels up to 3ft. Gin. diameter. Planing Machine, will
plane 5ft. by 2ft. Gin. by 2ft. Gin., cross-slide, fitted with two self-acting
tool boxes, table traversed by screw and direct pulleys; no gearing.
Duplex Axle Brass Step Boring Machine, will bore four brasses at
the same time ; self-acting. Group of Surface Plates, 3Gin. by 3Gin.,
24in. by 12in., IGin. by IGin., 15in. by Gin., 12in. by 3|^in. Group of
Fitters’ Bench Vices, three sizes, 5in., Gin., and Tin. jaws.
484 Messrs. Crossley Brothers, Limited, Openshaw, Man-
chester ; and 31, Market-street, Manchester.
Otto Domestic Motor. Jh.-p. Vertical Gas Engine, with
Crompton dynamo combined. I|h.-p. Vertical Otto Gas Engine,
with Crompton dynamo combined. 4h.-p. Horizonal Otto Gas
Engine, with Crompton dynamo combined. 5h.-p. Vertical Otto Gas
Engine. 4h.-p. Otto Gas Engine, with Lightfoot’s Patent Dry Air
Refrigerator. 7h.-p. Otto Gas Engine, combined with force pumps.
14.h.-p. Otto Gas Engine. Switchboard, with automatic cut-off.
Set of Accumulators. Electric Light Fittings, for private houses,
factories, &c. Electric Light Meter.
484a Manchester Electric Supply Co., Limited, 31,
Market-street, Manchester.
Electric Light Fittings, suitable for factory, house, and shop
lighting purposes. Accumulators. Special Cut-outs. Sectional
Switches and Measuring Instruments. *
485 James McMuRDO,New-street, Miles Platting, Manchester.
Repeating Machine, for Repeating Jacquard Pattern Cards.
Machine for cutting Peg and Lace Holes in blank Jacquard Cards.
Piano Machine, for cutting Jacquard Cards from the Design. 400’s
Doable-lift Double Cylinder Jacquard Machine, for weaving cross
borders.
486 Thos. C. Thompson, Britannia Mills, East-street, Lower
Mosley-street, Manchester.
Paging and Numbering Machine, treble action. Paging and
Perforating Machines. Stabbing and Cornering Machine. Patent
Meteor Oil Tank. Patent Grooved Chase. Eylet Machine (self-feed).
487 Joseph Gillott & Sons, Victoria Works, Graham -street,
Birmingham.
Seven of the most important processes of Steel Pen making,
practically shown in operation, viz., cutting out, side-slitting, piercing,
raising, marking, slitting, straight grinding, and cross grinding.
122
SECTION II
488 Asa Lees k Co., Limited, Soho Iron Works, Oldham.
Cotton Spinning ;ind Preparing Machinery. Single Lap
Machine for 40in. cards, with patent feed regulator and patent
rope driving. Single Carding Engine 40in. on the wire,
cylinder 50in. diameter, doffer 24in., taker-in 9in., covered with
inserted metallic saw-tooth wire, 102 self-acting revolving flats.
Drawing Frame, 1 head of 5 deliveries, 18|in. staff, 4 lines of
rollers, loose boss top rollers to front lino, case-hardened bottom
rollers to front line, traverse motions, back and front stop motions,
full-can stopping motion, and weight-relieving motion. Slabbing
Frame, 34 spindles, y|-in. diameter, 4 spindles to 19in., lOin.
lift, single centrifugal pressers, iron flats for stationary cloth, short
collars, 3 rows of rollers, loose boss top rollers to front line, case-
hardened bottom rollers to front line. Intermediate Frame, 52 spindles
yfin. diameter, 8 spindles to 25Y^in., lOin. lift, single centrifugal
pressers, iron flats for stationary cloth, short collars, 3 rows of
rollers, loose boss top rollers to front line case-hardened bottom rollers
to front line. Roving Frame, 64 spindles, y|-in. diameter, 8
spindles to 20^in., Tin. lift, half the frame with single centrifugal
pressers, and half the frame with double centrifugal pressers, iron
flats for stationary cloth, short collars, 3 rows of rollers, loose boss
top rollers to front line, case-hardened bottom rollers to front line.
Tlie Slubbing Intermediate and Roving Frames have Taylor’s patent
cone-releasing motions, and patent knocking-off motion attached.
Twist Ring Spinning Frame, 96 spindles, 2|in. gauge, Ifin. rings.
Sin. lift, patent Gravity spindles, double tin rollers, thread board
lifting motion, anti-balooning wire traveller clearers, inclined roller
stands, rollers weighted with dead weights, loose boss top rollers to
front line, case-hardened bottom rollers to front line, patent rope
driving arrangement. Weft Ring Spinning Frame, 116 spindles 2 Jin.
gauge, IJin. rings, 4 Jin. lift, patent Gravity spindles, double tin
rollers, thread board lifting motion, anti-balooning wire traveller
clearers, inclined roller stands, rollers weighted with levers, case-
hardened bottom rollers to front line. Patent Self-acting Mule, 252
spindles, Ifhi. gfuige, 17in. spindles, 1 Jin. back-shafts 1 fin. taller
shafts, creels for double roving, cai-riages boarded underneath, patent
duplex driving, treble grooved rimband arrangement, patent strapping
motion, improved backing-otf cam and backing-off chain tightening
motion, improved click locking motion, patent full cop stopping
motion, self-acting nosing motion, taking in by baud with patent
tightening apparatus, twist motion, self-acting anti-snarling motion,
self-acting strap-relieving motion, case-hardened bottom rollers to front
line. Patent Self-acting Twiner, 270 spindles, IJin. gauge, 17 -Jin.
spindles, improved brass locking slide, brass guides, zinc water trougiis,
taking-in by band, with patent tightening apparatus, patent full cop
stopping motion, self-acting strap, relieving motion, improved backing-off
cam and backing-off chain tightening motion. ( V)tton Waste .Machinery :
Breaker Carding Engine, 50in. on the wire, cylinder 50in. diameter,
doffer 24in., taker-in 9in., covered with inserted metallic saw-tooth
wire, rollers and clearers, lap drum in front 50in. diameter. Finisher
Carding Engine, 50in. on the wire, cylinder 50in. diameter, doffer
MACHINERY.
123
24iii., tukeriii covered with inserted metallic saw-tooth wire,
rollers and clearers. Patent Condenser, with steel strip dividers for
60 ends. Patent Self-acting Mule for spinning cotton waste on the
woollen system, 180 spindles, IJin. gauge, 18in. spindles, with back-
shafts l|in. diameter, l-|iu. faller shafts, patent arrangement giving
three speeds of spindles, drawback or jacking-in motion, motion for
altering speed of spindles at any part of draw, patent strapping
motion, improved click locking motion, improved holding-out catch,
pjatent full cop stopping motion, carriage stop motion, spindle stop
motion, taking-in by band, with patent tightening arrangement. Single
Grinding Machine for rollers or clearers, with dust fan and cover,
setting aiTangement.
489 John Dugdale & Sons, Soho Foundry, Blackburn.
Winding jMachine, arranged for cops, ring throstle, and hank
yarns. Beam Warping Machine, with automatic stopping motion.
Sizing Machine (Slasher system), with new improvements. Seamless
Bag Loom, Laird and Rutherford’s new improved system. Loom
(old), with Haythornthwaite’s new brake. Winding-on Motion, for
roving and other frames, Dugdale and Davies’ new system.
490 Bichard Threlfall, Bridgeman Place Machine Works,
Bolton.
Patent Self-Acting Mule, containing 408 spindles, IJin.
space, fitted up with all our latest improvements, constructed for
spinning fine cotton j’arns.
491 Taylor, Lang, & Go., Limited, Castle Iron Works,
Stalybridge, near Manchester.
Cotton Pulling Machine, to pull cotton direct from the bale.
Buckley’s Patent Opener, 40iu., with patent automatic pedal feed
regulator, making laps direct from the cylinder. Buckley’s Patent
Combined Opener and Scutcher, 40in. improved feed rollers, double
weighted. Finisher Scutcher, for 40in. cards, with improved automatic
pedal regulator. Self-Acting Mule, of 264 spindles, Ifin. gauge,
three threads, 17in. spindle.
491 A The Rossendale Belting Co., 20, Rook-street,
Manchester.
Hair and Cotton Duck Beltings. Hose-pipe. Belt Fasteners.
492 Henky Faulder & Co., 7 and 9, Lancashire Bridge,
Stockport; factories, Heaton-lane and Vernon Bridge,
Stockport.
Whole Fruit Preserves. Marmalade and Confectionery, also
special apparatus and machineiy producing the same.
492a The Credenda Cold-drawn Seamless Steel Tube
Co., Ledsam-street, Birmingham.
Cold-drawn Seamless Steel Tubes, in various sizes, thicknesses,
and sections.
124
SECTION II
493 W. & M. Marwick, 65, Nicolson-street, Edinburgh.
The Maiiufacture of Confectionery and Chocolate, in operation
showing the different processes in Sugar Boiling. Comfit Making by
Steam Pans. Lozenge Making. Chocolate Manuhicture.
493a The Haslam Foundry and Engineering Co., Limited,
Union Foundry, Derby.
A 3,000ft. Patent Dry Air Refrigerating Machine, with Steam
Engine combined. The machine will deliver dry air at 40 degrees
below zero Fahr.
494 James Proctor, Hammerton -street Iron Works,
Burnley.
Mechanical Stoker, and Self-Cleaning Machine, moving or hand
moving fire bars for supplying fuel to steam boilers mechanically.
495 Wilson & Ingham, Springfield Mill, Liversedge,
Yorkshire.
Machine for making Card Clothing of hardened and tempered
steel wire for revolving flat carding engines.
496 Thomas Coleby, 33, Lancaster Buildings, Barton Square,
Manchester.
Patent Reel, adapted to reeling cotton yarn from cops. A
similar machine for reeling from ring frame, tubes, and bobbins.
Bundling Machines for making up cotton yarns.
497 Thomas Gare, Eclipse Works, Booth-street, Edgeley,
Stockport.
Boot and Shoe Paring and Finishing Machine. Buffing and
Sandpapering Machine. Carving Machine. Profiling Machine.
Flexible Shafts, and various applications of same. Machine for
cutting off cams, screws of irregular pitch, and also milling tools at
any angle or pitch. Adjustable Self-Lubricating Bush. Improved
Blowpipe. Angular Ball Castor. Hair Brushing Machine. Solution
for resisting damp and rust.
498 Matthews and Yates, 35, Lever-street, Manchester.
Air Propeller. Apparatus for the propulsion, suction, and move-
ment of air fluids and gases. Automatic Closing Doors. Humidi-
fier for moistening atmosphere.
499 James Howorth, M.S.A., Victoria Engineering Works,
Earn worth, near Bolton.
Archimedean Screw Ventilators, self-acting. Radial Screw
Ventilators, self-acting. Radial Screw Ventilators, driven by motive
power. Horizontal Screw Ventilators. Centrifugal Screw Ventilators,
MACHINERY.
fitted to and driven by the Morton-Hall Patent Steam Motor.
Outlet Yalves for preventing back draughts. Chimneybreast Outlet
Ventilators. Draughtless Air Inlet Ventilators. Humidifier and
Air Inlets. Heating and Cooling Chests combined with Lacy’s
Patent Humidifier Fan, &c. Samples of Dutry-Colson’s Patent Fire
Extincteurs.
500 James Eobertshaw, Climax Works, Simpson-street,
Eochdale-road, Manchester.
Patent Dj^eing and Wringing Machine, for hanks of yarn. Sizing
and Wringing Machine, for hanks of yarn.
501 Edward Eenshaw & Co., 19, Corporation-street, Man-
chester.
Exhaust Fan, and Exhaust Fan with Engine attached.
502 The Anti-Fkiction Conveyor Co., 59, Mark-lane,
London, E.C.
Coiive}"or. Disintegrator ; the grinding surfaces are of chilled
iron.
503 William Samuel Sneade, Charters-street, Vauxhall-
road, Liverpool.
Improved Patent Rolls and Machin-ery in motion for the production
of chocolate, cocoa, paint, Ac.
504 Follows & Bate, Limited, Froxmer-street, Gorton,
Manchester.
Granite Roller Mill, with 3 rollers, 24in. by 14in. Iron Cone
Mills for Paint Manufacturers, 20in. grinding surfaces, capacity of
hopper, 12 gallons. Edge Runner Mill, 4ft. Gin. pan, rollers 30in. by
Sin. Drug Grinding Mill, on high stand, with fast and loose pulleys.
Pug Mill, for mixing dry colours and oil. Inclined Power Press, for
stamping sheet metals. Automatic Perforating Machine.
5('5 Julius Schlesinger, 59, Mark-lane, London, E.C.
Dust Collector, for removing dust in mills and factories. Wheat
Cleaner, Brush Scourer, and Smutter.
506 Blackman Air Propeller Ventilating Co., Limited,
63, Fore-street, London, E.C.
Blackburn Air Propeller, 48in. diameter, in motion, fitted with
automatic slmtters. Blackman Air Propeller, 36in. diameter, fixed,
with spindle vertical, for drying wool. Blackman Air Propeller, 24in.
126
SECTION IT.
diameter, fixed for removing dust, which tlie chaff in motion repre-
sents. Wool Drying Table.
507 Hulme and Lund, Steam and Hydraulic Engineers,
Egerton-street Iron Works, Chester-road, Manchester,
S.W.
Patent Direct-Acting Steam Pumping Engine for low lifts.
Direct-Acting Steam Pump for Boiler-feeding. Hydraulic Pump for
Dip Working in Mines, Ac. Donkey Pumping Engine for Boiler-
feeding, double-acting, with one ram. Donkey Wall Pump, 2in. ram.
Donkey Wall Pump, lin. ram.
508 Clabk, Bunnett & Co., Limited, Ducie Chambers,
Market-street, Manchester ; and Bathbone Place,
London.
Self-sustaining Hand Power Luggage Lift. Self-sustaining
Dinner Lift. Self-gripping Crab. H^alraulic Passenger Lift.
Castings in Iron and Bronze. Revolving Shutters.
509 Hodgkinson & Co., Limited, Ordsall Machine Works,
Woden-street, Manchester.
Mechanical Stoker. Self-cleaning Fire Bars. Rocking Bars, fin’
hand or machine firing. Oscillating Gas Engine.
510 Hinde & Son, Metropolitan Brush Works, Oxford-street,
and Coventry-street, Birmingham ; and 54, Rue
Greneta, Paris.
The Process of Manufacture of Toilet Requisites and Brushes
from the Raw iMaterials to the articles ready for use.
510a Westray, Copeland, & Co., Abbey-road, Barrow-in-
Furness.
High-Pressure Compound Engine, with cylinders, 4in. and Sin.
diameter, by 12in. stroke, fitted with Kirkaldy’s Compactum Feed-
water Heater.
511 Bratby and Hinchliffe, Sandford-street, Ancoats,
Manchester; and 146, Minories, London, E.C.
Complete Plants for the Manufacture of Aerated Waters, to be
shown in full operation. Bottle Washing Machine. Wiring Machine.
Turnover Filling Machine. Cork Bottling Machine. Syrup Making
Apparatus Syphon Bottles and Filling Machines. Beer and Wine
Bottling Machinery. Essential Oils. Soluble Essences. Fruit Syru])s
and Cordials. Patent and Cork Bottles. Partitioned Boxes and Cases.
Labels. Showcards. Corks. Capsules. Lead and 14n Foil.
Bottling Wire. Bottle and Box Brushes. Capsuling ^Machines.
MACHINERY
127
51lA T. W. Lawson, Napoleon Works, 260 and 262,Ptochdale-
road, Manchester.
Mineral and Aerated Waters. A Non-intoxicating Beverage
known by the name of Nap.
512 Dan Pylands, Blake-street, Stretford-road, Manchester;
and Hope Glass Works, Barnsley.
Ryland’s Patent Aerated Water Machines and Anti-atmospheric
Carbonic Acid Gas Generators, in action. Turnover Filling Machines.
Multiple Filling Machine lor Power. Bottle-washing Apparatus.
Model Syrup Making Plant. Rylands’s Patent Globe Stoppered,
Valve, and Cork Stoppered Aerated Water Bottles. Rylands’s Patent
Wire-bound Boxes and Cases for Aerated Water Bottles.
513 Thomas Parkinson, Britannia Works, Blackburn.
Hydraulic Cloth Bundling Press. 4h.-p. Steam Engine. Size
Mixing Machinery and Fittings. Brass and Iron Pumps. General
Copperwork.
Engineers and General Brasswork.
514 Lewis Sanderson (the Bailway and Electric Appliances
Co., Limited), Bosehill Works, Polmadie, Glasgow.
New Rotary Engine.
515 The Steel Nut and Tube Co., High Bank Steel Works,
Openshaw, Manchester.
Nuts. Rigging Screws. Railway Union Boxes. Steering Gear
Unions. Adjusting Boxes for Roofs and Bridges. Signal and Tele-
graph Stay Adjusting Boxes. Tubes, solid drawn. Hollow Crank
Shafts. Crank Pius. Piston Rods. Governor Spindles. Saddle
Screws. Fast and Loose Head Lathe Spindles. Connecting Rods.
Boring Bars. Boring Rods for mining purposes. Hydraulic Tubes,
with bends and connections. Dredger Bushes. Hollow Taps.
Hexagon and Round Solid Bars.
516 Bentley and Jackson, Lodge Bank Works, Bury, near
Manchester.
Rotary Cloth Stretching Machine for cotton goods. Belt Pulley
of variable diameter. Brass Centrifugal Pump, 15in. diameter.
Chilled Iron Calender Roll, 14in. diameter, ground and finished.
Paper Bowl, 24in. diameter, made of Craig’s woollen paper. Wood
Fibre Bowl, 20in. diameter. Sample R«»lls of Raw Cotton, Cop
Bottoms, White Linen, and Brown Papers. Verny Paper Cutting
Machine, to cut a web of paper 60in. wide, the paper being held
stationary whilst being cut. Brass Ejectors for vacuum boxes of
paper-making machines. Patent Automatic Wire Guide for regulat-
ing the wires of a paper-making machine. Sundry Steam Valves.
Roll of Paper.
128
i
ss
«e
*i
SF.CTION IT.
517 John Wolstenholme, Albert Works, Radcliffe, near
Manchester.
The Radcliffe Gas Engine, 2h.-p. nominal. Duplex Steam
Pumping Engine, Gin. water cylinders, lOin. steam cylinder, 12in.
stroke. Gun-metal and other Fittings.
518 Browett, Bindley, & Co., Sandon Engine AVorks, Salford,
Manchester.
Set of Lindley’s Patent Driving Gear, combined with Vertical
Engine and Dynamo. Vertical Compound Tandem Engine. 4h.-p.
Horizontal Engine. Patent Sandon Gas Engine. Set of Lindley’s
Patent Acme Governors.
519 Frank Pearn & Co., Engineers, West Gorton, Man-
chester.
Patent Quadruple-acting Pump, with two rams each lOin. diam.,
two steam cylinders each 12in. diam., stroke 9in. Double-acting
Pump, with one ram Gin. diam., one steam cylinder lOin. diam., stroke
8in. Long Stroke Double Ram Manchester Pumping Engine, rams
4in. diam., steam cjdinders GJin., stroke 8in. Long Stroke Quad-
ruple-acting Manchester Air Compressor or Vacuum Pump, with two
air cylinders 8in. diam., two steam cylinders 8in. diam., stroke 12in.
Single-acting Manchester Donkey or \Vall Pumps, rams |in. diam.,
steam cylinders Ifin. diam., stroke lin. Single-acting Manchester
Donkey or AVall Pumps, rams 2in. diam., steam cylinders 4in. diam.,
stroke 4in. Double-acting Manchester Donkey or Wall Pumps,
pumps 2in. diam., steam cylinders 4in. diam., stroke 4in.
520 AV. H. Bailey k Co., Albion Works, Salford, Manchester.
Bailey’s Patent Direct-acting Hydraulic Lift. This lift is
actuated by the pressure of the water in the town’s mains, the
exhaust water being afterwards used for feeding the boilers of the
Exhibition.
521 Edward Green k Son, 14, St. Ann’s Square, Alanchester ;
works, Wakefield.
Green’s Patent Fuel Economisers, fitted with dentilated scrapers
and access pipes, various sizes. Fuel Economiser for single boilers,
with cold-drawn seamless steel tubes. Specimen Castings of parts
of Economiser, all pipes being cast vertically in dry-sand moulds.
Fuel Economiser of 192 heating pipes, in operation to the working
boilers.
522 J. H. PiiLEY k Co., Elton Iron AVorks, Bury, near
Manchester.
Beetle Roller, 14ft., with friction cone and gearing, llin. lift of
fallers. Calender, Four-bowl Universal, for cotton and linen goods,
driven by Hunter’s patent clutch. Stretching Machine, 45in., for
&
cotton and linen goods. Doubling or Rigging Machine for cotton,
linen, or woollen goods. Velvet Folding Machine, for warehouse use,
driven by hand. Steam Drying Cylinders (three), with framing and
Riley’s patent vacuum valve motion, to prevent collapse of cylinders.
Starch Mangle, frame sides, two sizes. Diagonal Steam Engine,
Tin. by lOin., useful for driving separate machines. Small Oscillating
Steam Engine, 5in. cylinder. Hunter’s Patent Clutches, various sizes.
523 Nasmyth, Wilson & Co., Limited, Bridgewater
Foundry, Patricroft, near Manchester.
Overhanging Steam Hammer, lOcwt., fitted with self-acting
motion. Overhanging Steam Hammer, 3cwt., fitted with self-acting
motion.
525 Samuel Chatwood, Lancashire Safe and Lock Works,
Bolton.
Working Model of Chatwood’s Patent Hydraulic Balance applied
to (1) Banker’s Strong Room, (2) Passenger Elevator, (3) Jeweller’s
Window. Model of Banker’s Strong Room. Model of Elevator.
Model of Rising and Falling Window. Various Working Models of
Hydraulic Balance.
526
AYorthington Pumping Engine Co., 114, Queen Victoria-
street, London, E.C.
Worthington Compound Steam Pump. Worthington Low
Service Steam Pump. Worthington Boiler Feed Pumps of different
sizes.
Worthington Water Meters.
528 Margaret Clegg, King-street Leather and Boiler
Covering Works, 2, King-street, Oldham.
Specimens of various kinds of Covered Rollers, Clearers, Flats, &c.,
used in the various kinds of machinery for spinning cotton and silk
threads or yarns. A variety of Welsh Roller Skins, Roller Cluth,
Clearer Cloth, Jointed Hots, &c., used for covering the above rollers.
529 Wilson & Co., Beevor Works, Barnsley, Yorkshire ;
and 15, Market-street, Manchester.
Samples of Bobbins, Tubes, Spools, Pirns, &c., with patented
appliances for strengthening the same.
530 Bobert Hyde & Co., Spring Grove Mills, near
Stalybridge.
Roller Cloth, Clearer Cloth, Sizing Flannel, Scarlet Saxony
Flannel, White Saxony Flannel, Cricketing Flaimel.
531 F. A. Fitton & Son, Beehive Spindle Works, Bengal-
street, Manchester.
Spindles and Flyers.
9 .
9 .
130
SECTION II.
532 Baron & Hooarth, Leece Croft Mills, Kendal.
Reeds, Healds, Wire Healds, Cotton and Worsted Heald Yarns,
Mails, &c.
533 Mitchell. & Co., Limited, Bolton-street, Bury.
Rollers, Spindles, and Flyers.
534 James Wilde & Son, The Steam Brush Factory, South-
gate- street, Oldham.
Brushes for various purposes.
535 William Kenyon & Sons, Chapel Field Bopery,
Dukinfield, Cheshire.
Banding used in the Spinning of Cotton, "Worsted, Silk, and
other Fibres. Crane, Hoist, Block, and Driving Ropes, Fishing
. Cords, Ac.
536 John Swailes & Sons, Oldham Cop Tube Works, Moor-
hey, Oldham.
Paper and other Tubes used in Textile Manufacture, and Patent
Apparatus for placing them in the Spindles of all kinds of Spinning
and Doubling Machinery.
537 John Dixon & Sons, Steeton, via Leeds.
Bobbins and Tubes.
538 Joshua Kershaw k Son, Union Leather Works, Bolton.
Roller Leather for variofis classes of Cotton Spinning. Specimens
of Covered Rollers used for spinning fine counts.
539 W ADDINGTON AND Bamsbottom, Nicholas Croft, High-
street, Manchester.
Paper for various purposes. Tubes (Paper), Conical and other
descriptions for Spinning.
540 Buckley and Crossley, Tame Valley Spindle and Flyer
Works, Dukinfield.
Mule, Throstle, and Roving Spindles and Flyers. Loose Boss
Rollers, Ac.
541 James Lumb, Perseverance Brass and Steel Works,
Elland, Yorks.
Steam Engine Lubricators. Steam Engine Regulator. Steam
Engine Stop Motion. Steam Engine Momentum Governor. Fire
Brigade Appliances. Boiler Mountings. Compound Safety Valves.
Cun Metal Steam Fittings. Steam and Vacuum Gauges. Crucible
Steel Castings.
.4
MACHINERY.
131
542 John Whiteley & Sons, Brunswick Mills, Halifax,
Yorkshire.
Card Clothing. Card Cloth. Mild Steel and Hardened and
Tempered Steel Wire. *
543 Wilson Brothers, Corn Holme Mills, Todmorden ;
14, Market Place, Manchester.
Bobbins, Tubes, and Spools.
544 Sidney Moorhouse & Co., Victoria Works, Stalybridge;
and 5, Todd- street, Manchester.
Asbestos Steam and Water Valves. Asbestos Water Gauges
and Blow-off Cocks. Improved Sight Feed Lubricators. Marine
Spring Safety Dead-weight and other Valves. Pressure, Vacuum, and
Hydraulic Gauges. Steam Engine Indicators. Steam Kettles.
Steam Ovens.
545 John Calvert & Sons, Great Jackson-street, Manchester.
Steel Rules, Standards, Measures, Gauges, and Tools for
Engineers.
546 E. Griffiths Hughes, Victoria and Cateaton Streets,
Manchester ; and Gravel-lane, Salford.
Hughes’s Fir Tree Oil Spray Pumps. Aphicides. Fir Tree Oil
Insecticide for destroying insects on trees, plants, and animals.
Green and Cream Shading for glass houses. Hughes’s Floral Cement
for fixing the bloom of pelargoniums, &c., and the petals of cut bloom.
Hughes’s Styptic for preventing bleeding in vines after pruning.
547 Butter WORTH Bros., Limited, Newton Heath, Manchester.
Gauge Glasses and Lubricators. Spirit Level Tubes, and Glass
Articles for cotton, woollen, and silk machinery. Water Gauges.
Brass Fittings for Lubricators and Machinery.
548 F. Leroy & Co., Gordon-street, Great Clowes-street,
Lower Broughton, Manchester.
Sundry Pipes, &c., covered with non-conducting composition,
showing mode of application.
549 Fiuctionless Engine Packing Co., 27, Exchange
Buildings, St. Mary’s Gate, Manchester.
Engine Packing,
550 John Wilkes, Mapplebeck, & Co., Patent Brass
Tube Works, Abberley-street, Birmingham.
Solid-drawn Brass and Copper Tubes, for locomotive and marine
boilers ; Surface Condensers, &c.
SECTION IT.
551 R. Boehm & Co., 39, Bridge-street, Manchester.
Steam Gauges, Vacuum Gauges, Compound Gauges, Steel Tube
Gauges, Hydraulic Gauges, Test Gauges. Engine Counters for
revolutions and strokes. Engine Counters with quarter motion, for
turnstiles., Pp’ometers, Boiler Test Pumps, Steam Diyers or Water
Separators, Parker’s Patent Steam Traps, Injectors for feeding boilers.
High Speed Engine Governors, Cast-iron Valves, Filter Presses, Low
Water Alarms, Engine and Boiler Fittings, Patent Elastic Wire
Belting, Steam Traps with expansion apparatus.
552 Fairbubn and Hall, 63, Royal Exchange, Manchester.
Hall’s Patent Automatic Injectors for supplying steam boilers
with water. Jetometer, or Steam Jet Pumps, for raising large or
small quantities of water. Exhaust Steam Condensei’s, Vacuum
Ejectors, Syphon Pumps, and other steam jet specialities.
553 Squire Farron, Britannia Brass Works, Ashton-under
Lyne.
Reducing Valves, Sight Lubricators, Steam Traps, Steam Taps
and Valves, Tallow Cups and Lubricators, Water Gauges, Mud Taps
for boilers, <fec.
554 Wm. Barningham & Co., Limited, Pendleton Iron
Works, Manchester.
Samples of Rolled Girders. Compound Iron Beams. Railway
and Tramway Plant. Specimens of Rails, Iron and Steel Bars,
Angles, Tees, Ac.
555 Holden and Brooke, St. Simon’s Works, St. Simon-
street, Salford.
Exhaust Steam Injectors. Influx Automatic Injectors. Giffard
Injectors. Injector and Boiler Fittings, Ac. Low Water Alarms
Safety Gauge Glasses.
556 W. Willson Cobbett, 82, Southwark-street, London, S.E
Scandinavia Patent Cotton Machine Belting. Toughened Hair
Belting. Frictionless Belt Guides, in porcelain. Belt Stretcher.
557 John Ashton & Son, 36, Withy Grove, Manchester.
Examples of various kinds of Leather, in hides, butts, or
skins. Leather Belting of difTerent widtlis. Leather Laees.
Leather and Buffalo Pickers for weaving. Leather Fire Hose.
Leather Fire Buckets. Prepared Buftalo Leather for Cotton
Ginning. Prepared Sea Horse or Walrus for Glazing. Leather
Plate Carrier, for hotels and restaurants. Hydraulic Press Leathers.
Buffalo Skips.
MACHINERY.
133
558 Sampson & Co., 43, Haworth’s Buildings, Cross-street,
Manchester ; manufactory, Stroud, Gloucestershire.
Main Leather Driving Belts, made from the best English
leather. Single and Double Leather Belting, sewn with hemp laces
or copper wire. Endless Single Belts. Section of the largest belt
in the world; width, 75in. ; length, 153ft., of double thickness.
559 Turner Brothers; works, Spotland, Eochdale.
Asbestos in the crude state. Prepared Fibre, Yarn, Cordage,
and Cloth. Packings in variety for locomotive, stationary and
marine engines. Jointing Material in various forms for steam
and hydraulic purposes. Compound Cement for steam and water
joints. Non-conducting Composition for covering boilers and steam-
pipes. Ground asbestos. Miscellaneous Packings for locomotive,
stationary, and marine engines ; also for pumps. Elastic Tubular _
Cotton Ring Packings for stuffing-boxes. Elastic Metallic W ashers
for pipe joints. The Gripwell Solid Woven Hair Belting, for main-
driving and general purposes. Woven Seamless Hose for fire brigades.
The Gripwell Belting S}U’up.
560 The Gandy Belt Manufacturing Co., Limited, 5,
Ansdell-street, Liverpool.
Cotton Belting.
561 John Tullis & Son, St. Ann’s Leather Works, John-
street, Bridgeton, Glasgow.
Orange Tan Leather Beltings, flat and chain. Oak Tanned
Leather Beltings, flat and chain. Special Oxidised Waterproof Cotton
Belting. Y-shaped Hide Rope ; also V-shaped Wooden Rope, with
friction leather outside ; and Solid Square Leather Rope, of oak and
patent orange tan leather, for main driving. Chain Belting arched to
suit curve of pulley. Chain Belting, thick and thin sided, for half- |
twist drives. Llama Hair Belting, for outside and other special work. |
Hose Piping, for brigade and other purposes. Leather Fire Buckets. |
Leather Laces. Pump Butts. Leather and Buffalo Pickers. Buffalo |
Skips, and general mechanical leathers. |
562 Wm. Laycock & Sons, Queen-street Leather Works, j
• Keighley. j
Main Driving Belts. Single Leather Belting. Link Leather |
Belting. Pliable Leather Belting. Machinery Leather, various kinds. |
563 John Ormerod & Sons, Globe Leather Works, Castleton, j
near Manchester. i
Screwed Double Leather Main Driving Belts. Single Leather »
Belting, cemented and sewn. Single Leather Belting, cemented only j
specially for mule driving straps. Welsh Roller Skins, suitable for |
spinning all counts. Goat Roller Skins, suitable for spinning very |
fine counts. English Roller Skins, suitable for spinning medium and j
coarse counts. Covered Rollers, for spinning all counts.
Tiii.
564 EiCHARD Johnson & Nephew, Bradford Iron Works,
Manchester, and Alderwasley W^ire Mills, near Derby.
Wire Trophy, showing the raw material to the finished article,
consisting of ingots, blooms, rods, drawn fencing, bright, coj^pered,
tinned. Homo rope, patent improved steel, plough steel, galvanised
telegraph and telephone wires, galvanised steel barb wire, and
galvanised strand wire.
565 The AYhitecross Co., Limited, Warrington.
Pj’ramid of Wire of all kinds, showing process of maiiiifactiire
from pig iron, blooms, and billets. Coils of Telegraph and Telephone
Wire. Pyramids of Wire-rope for Rigging. Running and Standing
Tramway ropes. Colliery and Pit Ropes. Hauling and Towing Ropes.
Winch and Stopper. Wire Netting of various sizes. Wire Nails and
Staples. Small Model of Rope-making Machine.
566 Andrew and James Stewart, Limited, Clyde Tube
Works, Coatbridge, and 41, Oswald-street, Glasgow.
Lapwelded Iron and Steel Tubes, for all descriptions of boilers.
Iron and Steel Boiler Tubes with copper ends. Iron and Steel
Tubes for Rollers, Shafting, Ac. Tubes for Gas, Steam, and Water,
black, galvanised, and asphalted. Fittings of all kinds. Tubes
with various flanged joints, for high and low pressures of air and
water. Hydraulic Tubes. Hot AVater Heating Tubes. Artesian
AVell and 5lineral Boring Tubes. Oii AVell Tubing and Casing. Oil
Line Pipes. Blast Furnace Tuyere Coils, and Coils of various
descriptions. Covebars. Bedstead Tubes. Rigging Screws. Point-
rods. Handrail Tubes. Cast Iron Pipes and Fittings.
567 Power Pulley Co., Limited, Cbarles-street, Princess-
street, Old Garratt, Manchester.
Perforated Power Pulley (Shepherd’s Patent).
568 W. AND B. Cowan, Dutton-street Works, Manchester ;
Smith Square Works, Westminster, London; and
Buccleuch-street Works, Edinburgh.
3-Light AVet Gas Meter with AA’’illiani Cowan’s Patent Syphon
Overflow, and AAhirner and Cowan’s Patent Drum in Glass, showing
all parts in action. 3-Light Dry Gas Meter, with glass sides, showing
all parts in action. Automatic Pressure Changer. Photographic
Pressure Register. Electric Recorder for station meter indexes —
Mann’s patent. Case of Gas Pressure Gauges. Brass Main Cocks
and Taps. Models of Patent Governors. Syphon Liquid Meter.
569 Charles Cammlll k Co., Cyclops Steel and Iron Works,
Sheffield.
Tool Steel Files. Steel Castings, Bearing Springs. Volute,
Conical, and Spiral Springs. Armour Bolts. Buffers, Springs,
Files,
and other light articles.
MACHINERY.
135
570 G. Bikch, & Co., Bloom-street Tool Works, Salford,
Manchester.
Self-acting Slide-surfacing and Screw-cutting Foot Lathe, fitted
with various appliances for plain and ornamental turning. Foot
Power Milling Machine. Hollow Mandrel Electrician’s Lathe.
Amateur’s Work Bench. Case of Small Tools, and Case of Specimens
of Ornamental Turning.
571 Frederick W. Scott, Atlas Patent Steel Wire Ptope
Works, Beddisli, near Stockport.
Steel and Iron Wire Ropes for mining and mechanical purposes;
also Steel Wire.
572 'William Bose & Co., Grosvenor Chambers, Manchester.
Manual Brigade Engines, metropolitan pattern. Hose and
Implement Van, mounted on 5ft. wheels. Hand Curricle Engine,
constructed to carry hose and appliances beyond what is required to
work the engine. Horse Hose Cart, to carry fire appliances. Double
and Single Corridor Fire Engines. Hand Hose Reel, constructed to
carry 200 yards of hose, mounted on high wooden wheels, and fitted
with implement box on top. Gun Metal Landing Valves, with patent
outlet. Self Locking Fire Hose Couplings. Hand Fire Pump. The
London Hand Pump. Standpipes, single and double delivery, for
attaching to ground hydrants. Copper Branch or Delivery Pipes.
Patent Dividing Breeching Piece, for working two jets. Telescopic
Scaling Ladders, fitted with gun metal clips. Telescopic Fire Escape,
fitted with continuous brass handrails. Chemical Fire Extinguisher,
made entirely of wrought copper and brass.
573 PiCKSLEY, Sims, & Co., Limited, Bedford Foundry, Leigh,
Lancashire.
6h.-p. Portable Steam Engine, with 8 Jin. diam. and 12in. stroke,
steam-jacketed cylinder, variable expansion, eccentric, high-speed
Porter governors. 3-h.p. Vertical Steam Engine and Boiler combined,
on metal base plate, cylinder 5Jin. diameter, 8in. stroke. A Grass
Mower, Perfection, for two horses, 4ft. 3 in. right hand bar, enclosed
malleable iron gearing. Chaff-cutter, No. 4x, rising month,* 9 Jin.
wide, stop and reverse motions, and clutch gear for altering the
length of cut. Corn Crusher, No. 4, fitted with safety springs to
allow hard substances to pass without injury to the crushing surfaces.
Turnip Pulper and Sheer combined, DX, with large hopper for both
operations. Small assortment of Kitchen Ranges.
574 Horsfall and Bickham, Bridgewater Works, Pendleton,
Manchester.
Samples of Wire Card Clothing. Hardened and Tempered Steel
and Mild Steel Wire; round, flat, combined flat and round, double-
convex, angle-pointed, and surface-ground. Combined flat and round
angle-pointed, hardened, and tempered Steel Wire, set in natural
iiidiarubber, woollen cloth, cotton cloth, and leather foundations.
Samples of Foundations for Cards and of Pure Para Rubber, used in
the manufacture of the same, viz., natural India rubber, vulcanised
india-rubber, woollen cloth, cotton cloth, and cotton and felt cloths.
Patent Slow Traversing Card Grinder, with automatic traversing
motion. Models of Kennedy’s Patent Ladder-couplers, with model
ladders.
575 W. H. Bailey & Co., Albion Works, Salford.
Patent Watchman’s Peg Block.
Speed Indicators. Pressure
Recorder for steam. Patent Water Works Recorder. Gas Pressure
Indicator. Rotary Piston Water Meter (Pitt’s patent). Siigden’s
Patent Plunger Displacement Lubricator. Sandringham Hand
Fire Pump, suitable for the landings of private residences, hotels,
works, and Avarehouses. Bailey’s Patent AVire Tester,
Government pattern. In testing wire by this machine the
tensile strength is indicated by means of the dead weight of a
column of mercury, which remains fixed in position when the
specimen is broken ; tlie column of mercury is slowly permitted to go
back to zero, Avhen a small back-pressure valve is lifted from its seat.
Some important improvements have been made in this instrument at
the suggestion of Professor Unwin. Cement Tester. Ingram
and Stapler’s Patent Oil Tester. Professor Thurston’s Patent
Torsional Autographic Material of Construction Tester. Bailey’s
Patent Yarn Tester. Thurston’s Patent Oil Tester, railway
pattern. An Assortment of Testers for materials of construction.
An Assortment of Sight-feed Lubricators for steam engine
cylinders and steam hammers, Bailey’s patent and others.
Baird’s Patent Sight-feed Lubricators. Baird’s Patent
Sight Drop Oilers for heavy bearings, Ac. An Assortment of
Brass Fittings for locomotives, including Threlfall’s Patent Slide-
bar Lubricators and Oilers. An Assortment of Bailey’s Test Pumps
for locomotive, marine, and other boilers. Ashcroft’s Patent Low-
water Alarms, and other Apparatus for indicating danger in boilers.
An Assortment of Bailey’s Patent Copper Cap Fusible Plugs for
preventing danger to boilers through Ioav water. An Assortment of
Platt’s and Wood’s Patent Fusible Plugs. Bailey’s Patent Scavenger
Water Gauge Cocks for boilers. An Assortment of Marino Engine
and Boiler Fittings. An Assortment of Boiler Fittings for steam
tugs and launches. Greenhalgh’s Patent Reducing Valves. Locke’s
Patent Reducing Yalves. Aitken’s Patent Runaway Valves for
steam engines and pumps. This valve can be set to stop the engine
when it exceeds any given number of revolutions in case of break-
downs, blowing out of a pipe joint, defect in the governors, breakage
of a ])ipe, or any other accident. One may be seen at work on
the Stationary Fire Engine. IModel of the Exhibition Chimney,
fitted with Bailey’s Tape Lightning Conductoi-. Model of
Copper Ball on the central dome of the Exhibition, fitted with
Bailey’s Lightning Conductor. Model of a Powder Magazine
Lightning Conductor, as supplied for the Government powder
magazines. An Assortment of Steam Cocks, Valves, Injectors,
Steam Gauges, Pyrometers, Lubricators, and Oil Syphons.
Holt’s Patent Cylinder Drain Valve. Bailey’s Patent Steam
Trap. Kullig’s Patent Steam Trap. McCracken’s Patent
Steam Trap. An Assortment of Grether’s Patent Grip Lock
Unions for hose pipes. An Assortment of Patent Apparatus for
Engine and Boiler Fittings, which will be fully described in the next
edition of the Catalogue. Bailey and Duncan’s Patent Bell
Catalogue
Punch for checking tickets,
576 Bubals & Co., Limited, Begent and Philadelphia Works,
Sheffield.
Steel in various sections. Files and Rasps, Edge Tools, Carving
and Sculptors’ tools. Machine Knives, Chaff Knives, Reapers’ Knives,
Engineers’ Tools, Hammers, Saws, Patent Picks for road and railway
work, stone getting, and coal mining ; Rolled Steel Beater Plates for
thrashing machines. Scythes, Strickles, Hay and Straw Knives,
Reaping Hooks, Plough Plates, Sheep Shears, and general agricultural
tools.
577 William Gunther, Central Works, Oldham.
Girard Turbine, with vertical shaft for a fall of 22ft. and
90h.-p. Turbine with horizontal shaft for a fall of 104ft. and
102h.-p. Turbine for a fall of 200ft., coupled with a 40-light dynamo.
Suction Turbine, with horizontal shaft, and regulation for a fall of
50ft. and 27 h.-p. Turbine Governor. 30in. Blowing Fan. 12in.
Blowing Fan. 17 Jin. Exhaust and Blowing Fan. 4in. Centrifugal
Pump. 2 in. Centrifugal Pump.
577a London and County Photographic Co., 63, St
Paul’s Churchyard, London.
Photographs of Machinery in Motion and Views of Old Man-
chester.
577b John Heywood, Deansgate and Bidgefield, Manchester.
Official Catalogue and Guides.
578 Robert Watkinson, Gore-street Brass and Copper
Works, New Bailey-street, Salford, Manchester.
General Fire Extinguishing Appiiances. Instantaneous Hose
Unions. Standpipes. Landing Valves. Branchpipes. Hose Ferrule
for attaching unions to hose in place of wire wrapping. Chemical
Extincteurs. Canvas Hose Pipes. Leather Hose Pipes. Rubber
Lined Hose Pipes, Ac.
579 Andrew Handyside & Co., Limited, Britannia Iron-
works, Derby.
feai-
580
Geo. Thomas & Co., 28, Deansgate, Manchester.
Double-geared Universal Milliug Machine, with three-speed cone.
making six changes of speed. Spindle will carry arbor projecting
20in. The spiral bed can be set at angles of 35° each way, from
centre line of spindle, and fed automatically IGin., taking also 16iu.
between centres, and will swing 1 1 in. Horizontal movement of spiral
clamp bed G^yn., and the vertical movement below spindle centres
is lOin. Fitted up complete.
581 Hamilton Woods & Co., Liver Foundry, Salford, Man-
chester.
Feed Water Heater. Street Standpost, with outlets, screwed to
brigade gauge, complete with sluice valve and frost valve combined.
Valve Hydrant. Screw Hydrant. Landing Hydrant, with gun
metal outlet, screwed to brigade gauge. Ball Hydrant. Sluice
Valve, with spigot and socket ends.
582 Walter T. Glover & Co., Salford, Manchester; and
10, Hatton Garden, London, E. C.
Electiic Lighting : Examples of Wire and Cable variously
insulated for general electric lighting purposes. Concentric Cables
for electric lighting on board ship and for use with secondary
generators or transformers. Multiple Cables, for secondary genera-
tors or transformers. Non-inflammable and other Flexible Cords for
electric lamps. Examples of Joints for Electric Light Cables.
Examples of the whole of the Wire and Cable used in the Fine
Arts and Old Manchester and Salford Sections of the present Exhi-
bition. Examples of the Wire and Cable used in private house
installations, supplied for the Jubilee House in the Botanical
Gardens. Telephonic example case of Submarine Telegraph Cables.
Examples of Overhead and Underground Cables. Old Telegraph
Pole, showing insulators, shackles, Ac., from an early date. Tele-
graph Wire, insulated and bare, as now used. Patent Telephone
Cables, for preventing induction, also examples of the progress
made in the manufacture of anti-induction telephone cables.
Telephone Wire of all classes. Patent Wire Gauge, gives five direct
readings on every wire measured, viz., legal number, diameter in
inch, diameter in millimetre, square inch area, and carrying capacity
in amperes.
583 Pearson & Bennion, Union Works, Blue Boar-lane,
Leicester.
Eccentric Sole Cuttiim Presses. Acme Lift Cutter. Acme
Embossing Machine. Pair of 25in. Leather Rollers. Bench Em-
bossing Machine. Self-feeding Eyeletting Machine. Eyelet Macliine.
Punching Machine. Link Cutting Machine for Leather Belting.
AVax Thread Sewing Machines. Mill Band Sewing Machine. Cotton
Belt Sewing Machine. Beading Machine. Assorted Sample or
Model Lasts. Assorted Knives.
1
MACHINERY.
139
584 Henry Pooley & Son, Albion Foundry, Liverpool; and
Fennel-street, Manchester.
Single Hopper Grain Weigher. Elevator, driven by an Otto gas
engine. Self-indicating Pit Bank and other Weighing Machines.
Models of Ancient and Modern Weighbridges. New Printing Steel-
yard. Examples of Weighing Apparatus without loose weights.
Various Designs and Patterns of Weighing Machines.
585 David Hart & Co., North London Iron Works, AVenlock-
road. City-road, London, N.
Self-indicating Weighing Machines, without loose weights, for
fixing in the ground or floor. Portable Weighing Machines. Platform
Weighing Machines. Butchers’ Weighing Machines.
586 Edward Wood, Ped Bank Works, Manchester.
Assortment of Ventilating Apparatus, suitable for all purposes.
587 Thomas and John Taylor, 31 and 33, Manchester-
street, Oldham; 31, South Corridor, Royal Exchange,
Manchester.
Examples of Crucible Steel Castings. Samples of Files, Saws, and
Edge Tools. Chimneypieces in Statuary, St. Aim’s, Black and Rouge
jMarbles. Tiled Register Grates. Hand-painted Tile Hearths and
Panels. Fenders in brass, and brass and black and tiles. Fire
Brasses. Fireiron Rests. Fire Screens. Kitchen Ranges. Gas
Chandeliers. Hall Lamps and Brackets. Oil Chandeliers. Hall
Lamps, Brackets, and Table Lamps.
588 Newton, Chambers & Co., Limited, Thorncliffe Iron
Works, near Sheffield ; and Grosvenor Buildings,
Deansgate, Manchester.
Thornclifle Patent Cooking Range. Yorkshire Improved Cook-
ing Range. Leamington Improved Cooking Range. Grill Stove.
Steam Cooking Apparatus. Ornamental Heating Apparatus. Stable
Fittings. Garden Rollers. Lamp Posts. Palisading. Staircase
Banisters. Gutters, Pipes, &c. Miscellaneous Collection of Iron
Goods. Oak Chimncypiece, with overmantel. Set of iMarble
Slips for ditto. Brass and Real Bronze Register Grate. Tile Hearth
for ditto. Polished Brass Kerb with Real Bronze Figures. Set
Fire Brasses to match. Pair Brass Dogs for ditto. Brass Stop for
ditto. Rosewood Chimneypiece, with overmantel. Set Marble
Slips for ditto. Polished Brass Register Grate for ditto, with hand-
painted tiled sides. Tile Hearth to match. Polished Brass Kerb
to match. Set Fire Brasses to match. Pair Polished Brass Dogs to
match. Polished Brass Stop to match. Decorated Iron Chimney
piece, with overmantel. Black and Brass Tiled Register Grate
Tile Hearth to match. Electro-bronzed Kerb to match. Set Fire
Brasses to match. Pair Polished Brass Dogs. Polished Brass Stop.
Chimneypiece, in brown brocatilla, green and black marble. Black
'f^esaaasi
and Brass Register Grate to match. Tile Hearth to match. Black
and Brass Curb to match. Set Polished Brass Fii*e Brasses to match.
Pair Polished Brass Dogs. Polished Brass Stop. Niimidian Red
and Black Marble Chimneypiece. Polished Brass Register Grate to
match. Tile Hearth to match. Polished Brass Kerb to match.
Set Polished Brass Fire Brasses to match. Pair Polished Brass Dogs
to match. Polished Brass Stop. An assortment of Fire Brasses,
Dogs, Wood Coal Vases, &c.
589 John Port, Mill-street, Ancoats, Manchester.
Burglar and Fireproof Safes, with double and single doors.
590 Charles Walmsley, Atlas Iron Works, Bury.
Single-throw Challenge Fire Pump, with lOin. bucket and 14in.
steam cylinder. Paper Makers’ Stuff and Water Pump — stuff pump.
Sin. bore; water pump, lOin. bore, 15in. stroke. Gin. Double-acting
Vertical Boiler Feed Pump, Avith lOin. steam cylinder, 15in. stroke.
591 Chubb & Son’s Lock and Safe Co., Limited, Cross-
street, Manchester; also Liverpool, Wolverhampton,
Bombay, Melbourne, &c. ; chief warehouse, 128, Queen
Victoria-street, London.
Chubbs’ complete Banker’s Strong Room and Equipment. A full-
sized steel strong room is arranged so as to sIioaa' Chubbs’ patented
methods of erecting their steel AA'alls, strengthened externally by steel
angle ribs. Vestibule is closed by Chubbs’ hard steel massrte banker’s
door, secured by Chubbs’ patent diagonal bolts, Avhich are controlled
by tAA'o Chubbs’ neAA' patent gunpoAvder and acid proof locks. On
each side sections of masonry illustrate their A^arious systems of
building the exterior surrounding Avails. The A^estibule is closed in
day-time by Chubbs’ patent self-locking grills. The interior, lit by
electricity, consists of outer strong room, for papers, boxes, Ac., and
inner room, containing a bullion treasury, Avith all necessary shelving
and appliances. Chubbs’ Fire-resisting Doors, as selected by the
Executive, and approved by the Insurance Companies for protecting
all the openings of the Fine Art Galleries, Refreshment-rooms, Ac.
Chubbs’ Diamond and JeAvel Cage, for displaying jeAvels or precious
stones by day and securing them against fire and thieves by night,
Avithout the possibility of access by operating the mechanism unless
oAviier is present. Chubbs’ Patent Hardened-steel Safes, in eA'ery
variety and quality, for fire or burglar resistance, or both, as used
throughout the Exhibition for the Executive offices. Chubbs’ Detector
Locks, Latches, and Padlocks, ('liubbs’ iicav patented make of cheap,
good House Locks, as fitted throughout the Exhibition.
592 Chatwood’s Patent Safe and Lock Co., Limited, 11,
Cross -street, Manchester.
Banker’s Steel Strong Room. Banker’s Strong Room Door
and Frame. Intersected Steel Safe. An assortment of Fire,
Fall, and Burglar Proof Safes. An assortment of Invincible Locks,
Ac. Carriage Door Locks for Raihvays, Ac
MACHINERY.
141
593 Herbert Fordsmith, Hadfield-street Works, Cornbrook,
Manchester.
Adjustable Pedestals. Patent Adjustable Hangers. Adjustable
'Wall Bracket. Concentric Coupling. Various Steel Keys and Taper
Pins. Photographic Rolling Presses.
594 Hans Renold, Green-lane, Brook-street, Manchester.
Renold’s Patent High-speed Steel Driving Chains.
595 The Manchester Water Meter Co., Limited,
Tipping-street, Ardwick, Manchester.
Patent Positive Water Meters.
596 H. B. Barlow & Co., Cornbrook Works, Chester-road,
Manchester.
Wire Healds for we i ing, and shafts for the same. Expanding
Mandrels for lathe and ■> .ber machine work. Face-plate Expanding
Mandrels to dispense with ack centre support.
597 F. Fordsmith, Ordsal Hall Iron Works, Ordsal-lane,
Salford.
Assortment of Engineers’ Highly-finished Bolts, Nuts, Screws,
Studs, &c.
598 Milners’ Safe Co., Limited, 28, Market-street, Man-
chester.
Banker’s Strong Room Door, Lobby, and Grille. Banker’s Safes.
Fire-resisting Safe ; do. fitted with a chronometer time lock. Cash
Safe. Plate Safe (not fire resisting). Jewellery Safe, fitted with
mahogany drawers and sliding trays lined with velvet. A selection
of Milners’ Japanned Cash, Paper, and Deed Boxes.
599 George Price’s Safe, Lock, and Engineering Co.,
Limited, Cleveland Safe and Lock Works, Wolver-
hampton; Blakemore Foundry, Wednesbury ; and 46,
Corporation-street, Manchester.
A 72in. Double Door Commercial Safe, with bullion coffre.
Jewel and Cash Safe. Treble-bodied Diamond Safe. A Banker’s
Safe, and Safes for all purposes. Copying Press Stand. Hoist
Protector. Heating Apparatus. Mixing Mill and Distilling
Apparatus. Locks, Keys, &c.
600 Bolckow, Vaughan, & Co., Limited, Middlesbrough-on-
Tees.
Samples of Coal, Coke, Limestone, Cleveland Ironstone,
Hematite, Manganiferous and Manganese Ores. Cleveland, Basic,
and Hematite Pig Iron. Spiegeleisen, Ferro-Manganese, and Silico-
1
Ferro-Manganese. Steel Ingots. Blooms. Billets. Bound and
Square Bars. Double-headed, Bull-headed, Flange, and Bridge
Bails. Sleepers and Sleeper Keys. Fish Plates. Sole Plates.
Ship, Boiler, and Bridge Plates. Angles. Bulb Angles. Bulbs and
Girders. Crucible and other Steel Castings. Salt. Fire Bricks.
Ground Basic Slag for manure.
GOl Eobebt and John Dempsteb, Gas Plant Works, Newton
Heath, Manchester.
Model of Wr ought-iron Betort-houso Boof, 90ft. span. Model
'Wrought -iron Web Plate Girder. Model of "Wrought-iron Lattice
Girder. Model of Complete Sulphate of Ammonia-making Plant.
Model of Patent Centre Valve for working gas purifiers. Model of
Two Gas Scrubbers, 12ft. diameter by 50ft. high, for extracting
ammonia. Model of Water and Ammoniacal Liquor Distributors for
gas scrubbers. Model of Annular Condensei’s for cooling gas.
Model of Self-sealing Betort Mouthpieces. Combined Engine and
Botary Gas Exhauster, with pump, and two Gin. disc valves, com-
plete, to pass 5,000 cubic feet of gas per hour. Combined Engine
and Beciprocating Gas Exhauster, to pass 4,000 feet per hour. Gas
Exhauster Governor for regulating steam or compensator. Gas
Exhauster Flap B}^e-pass Valve. Self-sealing Betort Mouthpiece.
Coke-breaking Machine. Framed Drawings and Photographic Views.
G02 Hadfield’s Steel Foundry Co., Hecla Steel Casting
Works, Sheffield.
Cast-steel Castings of every description for Engineering purposes,
Bailways, Tramways, Shipbuilders, BollingMills, Hydraulic Engineers,
Gearing of all classes. Dredging, War Material, Collieries, Mines,
Quarries, Bailway Contractors, &c., comprising. Engineering, &c. : Steel
castings to take the place of expensive steel and wrought-iron
forgings, crossheads, cranks, and traction-engine gearing. Bailways :
Engine wheel centres up to 8ft. dia. (plain or cast with crank bosses
and balance weights), motion plates, roof staybars, horn blocks, axle
boxes and slides, crossheads, piston blocks, buffer boxes, cranks and
crank pins, tumbler shafts, points, crossings, dome-rings, manholes,
light platelayers’ trolley, wheels and axles, cast-steel crossings, &c.
Tramways : Patent Hecla wheels, tram engine wheels, points,
crossings, &c. Shipbuilders : Cranks, levers, crossheads, propeller
blades, nuts, couplings, and other marine castings. Bolling Mills :
Helical pinions, gearing, anvils, spindles, tups, &c. Hydraulic
Engineers : Cast-steel press cylinders and rams of all kinds, either in
rough or finished, complete ready for use, up to 22ft. in length, to
stand any desired pressure ; glands, pumps, press plates, doors,
cheeks, rivetters, hobs, &c. Gearing : hlvery description of spur,
bevel, mitre, pinion, segment and worm gearing, with straight or
helical teeth, machine moulded by patent machinery, or from full
patterns. Dredgers : Hadfield’s patent bucket, cast complete ; also
built-np buckets, bored and bushed complete ; dredger backs, lips,
links, tumblers, bars, pins, mouthpieces, bushes, gearing, <fec. The
MACHINERY.
143
cast-steel dredger buckets, exhibited by the kind permission of J.
Garlick, Esq., C.E., Preston, are those now being used in dredging
the Preston Canal, and are similar to what will be required in
dredging for the proposed Manchester Ship Canal. War Material :
Patent cast-steel projectiles, gun carriage castings, common and
shrapnel shells. One of our patent cast projectiles for 9-2in.
breech-loading gun is exhibited, which has penetrated 24|in. of
wrought iron, passing completely through a 16 Jin. Cammell wrought-
iron armour plate, 2ft. of wood, and 8Jin. into a second Avrought-iron
plate placed behind. The projectile was practically uninjured. Also
a Gin. projectile, which has passed through an Sin. Avrought-iron
plate, and A\'as so little injured that it could be put into the gun and
fired again. There are also exhibited tAA^o 9'2in. common shells
(Hadfield’s patent), as now being supplied to Her Majesty’s GoA'ern-
ment. Collieries, Mines, Contractors, &c. : Wheels and axles,
pedestals, rollers, pulleys, cage guides, points, crossings, &c. Wheels
and axles fitted by Hadfield’s patent system for contractors’ wagons,
light railways, stamp shoes and dies, tappets, cams, leA^ers, Ac.
Registered angle sheaA^es for carrying ropes round curves. Registered
sel^oiling rollers and frames, patent self-oiling wheels, baiTOAv
wheels, Ac. Shavings from unhammered steel castings, models of
dredger buckets, colliery requisites, Ac. A pair of steel Avheels and
axles, which, after falling doAvn a shaft 1,770ft. deep, are only slightly
bent.
603 Smith and Coventry, Limited, Gresley Iron Works,
Ordsal Lane, Salford, Manchester.
Tighe Hamilton’s Patent Wheel Cutting Machine. Jadosky’s
Patent Cigarette Machine. Thorne’s Patent Portable Drilling
Machine. Smith and Coventry’s Patent Twist Drill Grinding Machine.
Smith and Coventry’s Patent Capstan Rest Chasing Lathe, Gin.
centres. Smith and Coventry’s Patent Capstan Rest Chasing Lathe,
lOin. centres. Cooper’s Patent Brass Finisher’s Lathe. Double-
geared Universal Milling Machine. Longitudinal Milling Machine.
Circular Saw, for cold iron. High-speed Press Drilling Machine.
Surface Plates, Straight Edges, TAvist Drills. Milling Cutters,
Cylindrical Gauges and Samples of Work.
604 Chas. L. Baker & Co., Cornbrook Telegraph Works,
Worsley-street, Egerton-street, Hidme, Manchester.
Electric Light Fittings. Electric Bells and Indicators. Tele-
phone Apparatus. Testing and RailAA’^ay Telegraph Instruments.
Lightning Conductor Fittings. Philosophical Apparatus.
605 L. Sterne & Co., Limited, The Crown Iron Works, North
Woodside-road, Glasgow.
Tool Grinder. LTnivorsal Emery Grinder. Emery Grinder.
Tool Grinder, Avith attachment for grinding tAvist drills. Assortment
I
se
n
i
of Emery Wheels. Assortment of Spiml Sf rings, and Sterne’s patent
Yolnte and Comjx)und 'Rubber Springs. Case of Ai'ticles showing
work done by Emery Wheels.
606 Charles Torham Archer, Albion \Yorks, Cloudsley
Place, Liverpool-road, London.
Sansage and Mincing Machines, various sizes. Coffee and Mlieat
Mills. Patent Potato Masher and Fruit Presser. Presses and
Appliances for manufacturing the above patented presser.
607 Wm. Buckley k Co., Patent Piston Works, Millsands,
Sheffield.
Buckley’s Patent Compound, Compensating, Metallic Pistons
and Packings.
608 The Unbreakable Pulley Co., Ogden-street, Ardwick,
Manchester.
Wrought-iron Pulleys, Bushes, and Wells’ Lamps.
609 Schaffer and Budenberg, 1, Southgate, St. Mary s-
street, Manchester.
Collection of Steam Pressure, Vacuum, and Hydraulic Gauges of
various kinds. Injectors, Governors, Engine Indicators, Counters,
Tachometers, Low Water Alarums, Steam Traps, Lubricators, Brass
and Iron Valves, Test Pumps, Pulsometers, and General Engine and
Boiler Fittings.
610 J. Hopkinson, & Co., Britannia Works, Huddersfield.
Corrugated Copper Cylinders. Patent Torpedo Washer.
CoiTugated Copper and Brass Tubes, Valves, and Taps.
611 Messrs. Nasmyth, Wilson, & Co., Limited, Bridgewater
Foundry, Patricroft, near Manchester.
Patent Six Cylinder Horizontal Direct-acting Hydraulic Pump-
ing Engines. Cast-steel Bottom Cylinder for Patent Compound
Vertical Cotton Press. Cast-iron Ram with gun- metal shoe for
Patent Compound Vertical Cotton Press. Cast-steel Cylinder for
Patent Finishing Cotton Press. Cast-iron Ram with gun-metal
shoe for Patent Finishing Cotton Press. Wrought-iron Column with
nuts for Patent Finishing Cotton Press. Vertical Drilling and
Boring Machine. Model of Patent Compound Vertical Cotton
Press.
612 Titanic Steel Co., New Islington, Manchester.
Samples of Steel Castings.
'fi
MACHINERY. 145
613 Seebohm and Dieckstahl, Dannemora Steel Works,
Sheffield.
Case containing Bars and Fractures of Swedish Iron, Blister
Steel, and Crucible Cast Steel, for engineers’ and other tools, &c.
The fractures show the appearance of the various descriptions of steel
according to the percentage of carbon, &c. Also Fractures of Self-
hardening and other special Steels. Spiral Springs, Saws, Tools.
614 Thorsten Nordenfelt, M.Inst.C.E., 53, Parliament-
street, London, S.W.
Samples of Wrought-iron Castings and Steel Castings, finished
and unfinished, made by the Mitis process.
615 Joseph Raynor & Sons, Cambridge Iron Works,
Oldham.
Swivel Incline Card Engine, Roller, and Cotton Lap Carriage.
Swivel Cotton Lap Carriage. Straight Card Engine Roller Carriage.
Swivel Cotton Can Carriage. Emery Roller Carriage. Spinning-
room or Cellar Carriage. Model of Double Tramway Point. Small
Condensing Steam Engine, 2 cylinders, 4in. stroke.
616 E. Jagger & Co., Tomlinson-street Works, Ashton-road,
Oldham.
Portable Cop Tubing Apparatus. Pickford and dagger’s Patent
Spindle Footstep Protector.
616 a John Swailes and Sons, Oldham Cop Tube Works,
Moorhey, Oldham.
Paper and other Tubes used in textile manufacture and Patent
Apparatus for placing them on the spindles of all kinds of
spinning and doubling machinery.
617 The Steel Company of Scotland, Limited; offices
150, Hope-street, Glasgow ; works, Hallside and
Blochairn, Glasgow.
Samples of Boiler, Ship, and Bridge Plates, Angles, Tees, Beams,
and other sections. Rails for permanent way and tramways. Steel
Castings and Forgings. Reeled Bars. Flanged and Welded Boiler
Plates. Eye-bar Blanks for bridges. Bridge Plates, with rolled
edges, Ac.
618 James Stott & Co., 10, Market Place, Manchester.
The Vernon Patent Combined Gas Governor and Stop Valve.
Test-holders for experimental purposes. Gas Consumption Indicators.
Gas Pressure Gauges. Gas Leakage Indicators. Test Meters. Gas
Lamps and Burners. Semi-rotary Pressure Pumps. Gas and Steam
Cocks and Fittings.
K
146
SECTION II.
619 The Electric Portable Battery and Gas Igniting
Co. Limited, Clegg s Court, Salford, Manchester.
Patent Dynamo Electric Gas Lighters. Electric Bells, from 2 Jin.
to Gin. gongs, continuous action, and ordinary Leclanch^, Bunsen,
bichromate, and patent chloride of silver hermetically-sealed Batteries.
Electric Indicators, Com*t Sets, consisting of bell, battery, wire and
push, self-contained Switches, one to four way. Wood, China, Brass,
and Pear Pashes. Assortment of Wires for bell and electric light pur-
poses. Induction Coils, self-contained, with sealed batteries for medical
use, in miscellaneous sizes. Show Bottles of Chemicals, as used in
electric batteries. Induction Coils, Electric Cigar Lighters, Miniature
Electric Bath for medical purposes. Galvanometers, Magneto-electric
Machines and Dynamo-electric Machines for lighting. Also a 250-
light Dynamo in Dynamo House. Clock Motors.
620 Thos. Firth & Sons, Limited, Norfolk Works, Savile-
street East, Sheffield.
100-tou Gun, muzzle part. 16cm. Gun Tube. 90mm. Gun
Tube. Gun Jacket. Gun Ring. Gun Ring. Large Trunnion.
Small Trunnion. 9*2in. Projectile. 100-ton Gun Projectile.
Locomotive Crank Axle. Piston Rod. Large Screw Propeller Blade.
Three-blade Screw Propeller. Pivot Plate. Transom. Paddle
Centre. Hydraulic Cylinder. Wheel Centre. Toothed Wheel
Tyre. Toothed AVheel. Tramway Car Wheels and Axle. Tramcar
Wheel fitted. Tramcar Wheel unfitted. Tramcar Wheel Tyre
polished. Steel Turnings. Case containing Saws. Cases con-
taining Files, Edge Tools, and Specimens of Steel.
621 Gresham and Craven and The Vacuum Brake Co.,
Limited, Craven Iron Works, Manchester; and 32,
Queen Victoria-street, London, E.C.
The Vacuum Automatic Continuous Brake and Passenger
Communication for Railway Trains. Gresham’s Patent Self-acting-
Re-starting Injectors, Exhaust Injectors, Combination Vacuum
Ejectors, Water Lifters and Ejectors, &c. Holt and Gresham’s
Patent Steam Sanding Apparatus for Locomotives. Gresham’s
Patent Combination Steam and Feed Valves for Injectors and Ejectors.
Holt’s Patent Feed Pipe for Locomotives.
622 The Staffordshire Steel and Ingot Iron Co. Limited,
Bilston, Staffordshire.
Pig Iron. Ingots. Blooms. Billets. Bars. Plates and Sheets of
Soft Steel or Ingot Iron, with Finished Articles made therefrom.
Slag or Cinder produced in the process of making pig iron into soft
steel.
623 John Henry Andrew & Co., Toledo Steel Works,
Sheffield.
Tempering Steel, in bars, sheets, ingots, billets and forgings.
Files. Hammers. Carriage and road conveyance Springs. Carnage
and road conveyance Axles.
624 John Crowley & Co., Corporation-btreet,
and Meadow Hall Iron Works, Sheffield.
Malleable Castings showing various kinds manufactured
by the exhibitors. Weston’s Patent Direct Differential Pulley
Block complete with chain. Assortment of Knight’s Patent Knife
and Fork Cleaners and Knife Sharpeners. Weston’s Patent Tubular
Roller Bearings in six sizes. Samuel Edwards’s Patent Duplex Safety
Lever Chaff Cutter, No. 6e, by which the user is secured against
accident in working. Samuel Edwards’s Patent Invincible Lawn
Mowers, lOin., with wood rollers to work either in front or at back of
revolving cutters. Samuel Edwards’s Improved Lawn Mower The
Victor, 12in., with wood handle. Wheel Barrow with malleable
cast-iron framework and sheet-iron sides and bottom. Sundry
Castings used in connection with Textile Machinery. Malleable Iron
Warping and Loom Beam Flanges. Harris’s Patent Fasteners for
connecting strapping. Wood Bobbins provided with Patent Metal
Protectors for roving and slubbing frames.
625 Joseph Webb & Co., Irwell Forge and Rolling Mills,
Bury, Lancashire.
Single-throw Bent Cranks. Double-throw Bent Engine Crank.
Double-throw Bent Pump Crank. Treble-throw Bent Engine
Crank. Four-throw Bent Pumps. Single-throw Bent Loom Cranks.
Single-throw Bent Square Cranks. Specimens of Roller Iron, turned,
fluted, and finished. Specimens of Socket Iron, turned and finished.
Specimens of Scrap Iron.
626 Ebbw Vale Steel, Iron, and Coal Co., Limited, Ebbw
Yale, Monmouthshire.
Rail and Fishplate Sections. Sleepers and Rail Joints. Pig-
Iron. Puddled Iron. Bar Iron. Coke. Bricks, ornamental and
plain.
627 James and Frederick Howard, Britannia Iron Works,
Bedford.
Specimen of Patent Portable Railway, 24in. gauge, 141b. rails.
Tipping Wagon. Specimens of Sleepers for permanent and portable
railways.
628 Howell & Co., Brook Steel Works and Sheffield Tube
Works, Sheffield.
Howell’s Tool Steel. Bright-drawn Steel Shaiting. S. E. Howell’s
Patent Blind Action for railway carriage and other window blinds.
Electro Copper-coated Steel Tubes. Copper and Brass Cased Steel
Tubes. Vacuum Brake Tube and Fittings. Tuyere and Heating
Coils. Well-boring Tubes. Cold-drawn Steel Tubes for boilers,
bicycles, and tricycles. Tubes for hydraulic rams.
SECTION II.
629 The Bolton Iron and Steel Co., Limited, Bolton,
Lancashire.
Weldless Steel Angle Ring, for jointing boiler baiTels on to tube
or end plates. Weldless Steel Flat Hoop, for joining barrel plates of
boilers. Weldless Steel Expansion Rings, for boiler flues. Welded
Steel Boiler Flue, with expansion rings. Weldless Steel Angle Ring,
for boiler domes. Cast-steel Bases and Stand Pipes, for boilers.
Warp Beam, with patent steel flanges. Stamped Steel Hemisphere,
for submarine mines. Steel Crank Axle, which has worked for nearly
19 years, and run 526,185 miles. Cast-steel Wheel, for locomotive
engine. Models of Patent Girders.
630 Leeds Forge Co., Limited, Leeds.
Fox’s Patent Corrugated Boiler Furnace Flues. Leeds Forge
Siemens Mild Steel Plates for boiler purposes. Fox’s Pressed and
Flanged Parts of Boilers. Weldless Steel Parts of High-pressure
Boilei-s. Specimens of Leeds Forge Siemens Mild Steel. Fox’s
Patent Flanged Frame Plates, for rolling-stock.
631 The Ashbury Eailway Carriage and Iron Co.,
Limited, Openshaw, Manchester.
Hopper Wagon, which unloads through the bottom bj" means
of self-closing doors. Pair Railway Carriage Wheels and Axles, Man-
sell’s patent, with patent locking keys, teak wood centres, one wheel
having a wrought-iron hydraulic pressed boss and the other a cast-
iron boss. Pair of Mansell’s Wheels and Axles, suitable for tram-
cars. Pair of Solid Wrought-iron Hydraulic-pressed Railway Wagon
Wheels and Axles.
632 Askham Bros, and Wilson, Limited, Yorkshire Steel
Engineering Works and Crucible Steel Foundry,
Sheffield.
Centrifugal Pulveriser. Mumford Moodie’s Patent Separator.
Patent Automatic Fixed Points and Rolled Steel Heelplates for Tram-
ways. Crucible Steel Movable Points and Crossings. Crucible Steel
Castings for engineers, marine, and colliery purposes. Show Case
containing Samples and Fractures of Cast Steel. Samples of Material
treated in the Pulveriser.
633 Francis William Webb, C.E., London and North-
Western Hallway, Crewe.
F. W. Webb’s Inside Carriage Handle. This handle is placed
inside the carriage ; it is not fitted to the door like the outside
handle, but to the door frame, and is placed high up out of the reach
of children ; to open the door the handle is simply pulled down-
wards, and does not in any way interfere with the outside handle ;
it can be thrown out of action from the outside if desired by the
officer in chai’ge of the train. High-pressure Engine designed by
MACHINERY.
149
Richard Trevethick about 1803-9, and made by Hazeldine & Co., of
Bridgenorth ; working pressure, 601b per square inch. This engine
was found at Hereford in a dismantled state by Mr. F. W. Webb, of
Crewe, in 1883, and purchased as scrap iron ; the parts were taken
to Crewe and put together as now seen ; some of them were unfortu-
nately found to be broken ; these were pieced and a few missing
parts were restored, and made to accord as nearly as possible with
the illustration in the Life of Trevethick. Full Size Model of the
Rocket. This model, made at Crewe Works, represents the original
engine as it appeared when it competed for the prize of £500 offered
by the directors of the Liverpool and Manchester Railway Company,
at Rainhill, in 1829 ; the engine weighed, in working order, 4 tons
3 cwt. ; it ran at the rate of 12 J miles per hour with a load equivalent
to three times its weight, and when taking a carriage and passengers
it travelled at the rate of 24 miles per hour. The Rocket now at
South Kensington represents the engine as subsequently altered.
634 The Ashbury Railway Carriage and Iron Co.,
Openshaw, Manchester.
Reversible Tramcar for two horses, to carry 17 inside passengers
and 21 outside. The outside seats are placed transversely, commonly
known as garden seats. The car turns round upon a bogie frame.
Iron Tipping Wagon.
635 Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway Co., Hunt’s Bank,
Manchester.
Invalid Saloon Railway Carriage, 32ft. long by 8ft. wide, fitted
with invalid bed and other equipments. Models and Drawings of
early Railway Carriages and Brake, and Model of Patent Axle Box.
636 Sharp, Stewart & Co., Limited, Atlas Works, Man-
chester.
Eight-wheels-coupled Consolidation Locomotive Goods Engine
and Tender, for 1 metre gauge.
637 Beyer, Peacock & Co., Gorton Foundry, Manchester.
Four-wheels-coupled Inside Cylinder. Express Passenger Loco-
motive Engine and Tender. Small Four-wheels-coupled Outside
Cylinder Locomotive Engine, Dot, gauge 1ft. 6 in., specially con-
structed for working on tramways in yards and workshops, and also
adapted for tail rope shunting of ordinary raihvay wagons, &c.
638 Francis William Webb, C.E., London and North-
Western Railway, Crewe.
Model of Rocket and Tender, as originally designed by Robert
Stephenson, and as they appeared at Rainhill in 1829, when com-
peting for the prize of £500 offered by the Directors of the Liverpool
and Manchester Railway, prior to the opening of the line.
J
1
■^&Si
639 Fjrancis William Webb, C.E., London and North-
Western Railway, Cre^ve.
Compound Goods, Side Tank Locomotive, with two high-
pressure C 3 dinders, 14in. diameter 24in. stroke, and one low-
pressure C}dinder 30in. diameter by 24in. stroke, driving wheels 5ft.
2Jin. diameter. Duplex Reversing Gear for compound engine, by
which both high and low pressure engines ma}" be reversed together
or separatel}", and any degree of expansion obtained as required.
Bent Steel Crank for low-pressure cjdinder of compound engines.
Working Model to J scale of Webb’s three-cylinder compound
express passenger engine. Steel Wheels and other Castings made at
Crewe Works. Webb’s Steel Permanent Way, with Ramsbottom
water trough attached, as used on the L. and N.-W. Railway. Standard
Signal and Interlocking Gear, as used on the L and N.-W. Railwa}’, and
Key Locking for small stations ; also Electric Locking and Repeating
Instruments. Model to J scale of Standard 42ft. Carnage, with
Webb’s system of radial wheelbase, as used on the L. and N.-W.
Railway. Railway Carriage Door and Frame fitted with Webb’s
arrangement of inside handle, for opening the door from the inside.
A Series of Photographs showing t^^pes of engines and places of
interest on the L. and N.-W. Railway.
640 Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway Co., Hunt’s Bank,
Manchester.
Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway Express Bogie Passenger
Engine and Tender, fitted with Automatic Vacuum Brake, four
wheels coupled, 6ft. diam. on tread, bogie wheels, 3ft. OJin. diam.
on tread, C 3 dinders 17 Jin. b 3 " 26in., heating surface, 1,031 square ft.
641 The Manchester, Sheffield, and Lincolnshire
Railway Co., London-road Station, Manchester.
Bogie Locomotive Engine for Express Passenger Service.
642 Nasmyth, Wilson, & Co., Limited, Bridgewater Foundry,
Patricroft, near Manchester.
Locomotive Tank Engine, four wheels coupled, with four-wheel
bogie, 3ft. Gin. gauge. Open Standard Steam Hammer (20cwt.),
fitted with self-acting and hand motion. Model of Patent Con-
vertible Wagon. Model of Blowing Engines.
643 The Manchester, Sheffield, & Lincolnshire Railway
Co., London Road Station, Manchester.
Six-wheeled Composite Lavatory Carriage.
644 Albion Iron Works Co., Rugeley, Staffordshire.
Vertical Steam Engine, 4h.p., 5|in. cylinder, and Vertical
Cross-tube Boiler, mounted on water tank base. Horizontal Steam
Engine, 4h.p., 6 Jin. C 3 dinder, fitted with high-speed governor.
Crushing and Grinding Mill, with chilled cast-iron cylinder and
MACHINERY.
151
concave, fitted with self-acting safety lever, patented adjustment and
feed appliance. Chilled Cast-iron Grooved Roller and Breast, for
grinding and crushing purposes.
645 Isaac Storey & Sons, Knott Mill, Manchester.
Range of Colour-mixing Pans, with stirring gear, for calico
printers. Set of Colour Measures and Scopes in Copper. Gun-metal
Shell and other Castings. Speed Indicators. Engine Indicators.
Pressure Gauges. Gun-metal Steam Valves and Cocks. Engine and
Boiler Fittings. Cast-iron Steam and Water Valves.
646 Alexander Oldham & Sons, Johnson Brook Patent
Piston Works, Dukinfield.
Weldless Steel Coil Piston Springs. Air Pump Buckets.
Pistons Complete.
647 Ince Forge Company, Wigan.
Long Pin Crank Shaft (Marine), in iron, forged with open sweep,
pin drawn under hammer. Connecting Rod, Marine, forged from
Siemens-Martin ingot steel. End for Hollow Built-up Crank Shaft,
forged from Siemens-Martin ingot steel.
648 Perkins, Son, and Barrett, The Forge, Bradford,
Yorks.
Wrought-iroii Split Pulleys. Patent Pulleys for double drives.
Turned Iron and Steel Shafting and Couplings. Bearings of various
descriptions, and different varieties of Fixings for millwright work.
649 Astbury & Co., Engineers, 9, Albert Square, Man-
chester.
5Jin. centre Self-acting Foot Lathe, Standard Pattern, of
new design. The headstock is fitted with hardened and ground
steel spindle, with conical bearings, and Clement’s driver ; sliding
and screw-cutting arrangement, with guide-screw and 22 change
wReels ; also self-acting surfacing motion by back shaft ; treadle
motion, with crank working on hardened steel centres. All the gear
wheels are machine-cut, from solid blanks. The lathe has a gap bed
5ft. long, admitting 27in. between the centres, and 18in. diameter in
the gap. Usual accessories are provided. 7 Jin. Centre Self-Acting
Lathe. The headstock has a steel spindle with conical bearings and
Clement’s driver, guide-screw and 22 change-wheels ; also self-
acting sliding and surfacing by back shaft, the various motions being
controlled from front to the saddle. Top driving apparatus Avith
tw’o sets of pulleys, and usual accessories are provided. All gear-
wheels have the teeth cut from solid. The gap bed is 8ft. long,
admitting 4ft. 9 in. betw^een centres, 25in. diameter in the gap.
152
SECTION IT.
650 Glenfield Co., Limited, East Shaw-street, Kilmarnock.
Water Meter Pressure Recorder Alarm for detecting bursts in
water mains. Drinking Fountain and Patent Self-closing Tap. Sluice
Valves. Patent Ball Valve. Spindle Hydrant and Branch Pipe.
Fire Cock. Stand Pipe and Hose. Lock Surhice Box and Fountains ;
and a number of Photos.
651 Lloyd and Lloyd, Albion Tube Works, Birmingham.
Gas Tubes. Galvanised Tubes. Steam Tubes from Jin. to
4in. Boiler Tubes, made in wrought iron, steel, and homogeneous
metal, and lap-welded. Elbows, Nipples, &c., of various sizes. Short
Pieces of Screwed Tube, and also Special Tubes and Fittings of various
shapes. Boiler Tubes with copper ends. Hydraulic Fittings. Samples
of Homogeneous Metal Tubes, crushed, to show^ the quality of the
metal. Steel Fittings for Boring Rods. Artesian Well-boring Tubes,
flush joint and swelled joint. Steel Boring Rod, with cutting crown and
core extractor. Stay Tubes, with back nuts. Hydraulic Tube, with
hexagon socket, ends of tubes coned and fliced. Boiler Tube, which
has been flattened in parts under steam hammer to show quality of
iron. Solid Bottom Cock, as used for steam and water, wdth both
iron and brass plugs. Main Cocks. Coils of various descriptions.
Boiler Tubes, wdth one end welded up, as used for Field’s patent
boilers. Reservoirs for Gas or Air, with ends \velded in by Lloyd and
Lloyd’s patent process. Norton’s Patent Well Tube, with pointed
end for driving into ground.
EXHIBITS IN GROUNDS OF MACHINERY
SECTION.
G 60 The Patent Paraffin Gas Lighting Co., Limited,
12, Washington-street, Glasgow.
Oil Gas Works in full operation, showing the gas being made
from paraffin oil or petroleum. The gas, which is 60 candle-power,
is shown burning in a dark room, with practical demonstrations
of the light as compared with the Manchester coal gas, also shown
burning under pressure.
661 A. C. Wells & Co., Ogden-street, Ardwick, Manchester.
Corrugated Square Hut. Fancy design manufactured by
E. C. and J. Keay, Birmingham, to hold Wells’ New Light Lamp ;
also Lamps exhibited outside.
662 The Dowson Economic Gas and Power Co., Limited,
3, Great Queen-street, Westminster, London, S.W.
Apparatus, in operation, producing Fuel Gas, suitable for
driving Gas Engines, heating Bakers’ Ovens, Cocoa Roasting, Type
Founding, Soldering, Singeing Fabrics, Gassing Yarns, Ac. The
EXHIBITS IN GROUNDS OF MACHINERY SECTION.
153
Apparatus shown is provided with a governing arrangement, by
means of which the production of gas is regulated automatically to
suit a varying rate of consumption. The gas produced is used for
driving a 14h.-p. (nom.) Otto engine.
663 Joseph Baker & Sons, 58, City-road, London, E.C.
Bread, Biscuit, and Cake Making Machinery and Ovens, in
operation daily. Confectionery, Chocolate, and Ice Cream M;»king
Machinery, the whole worked by 7h.-p. Otto Gas Engine.
Bread Making : The Baker Patent Flour Sifting and Mixing
Machine, the New Patent Thomson Double-action, Reversing, Self-
tilting, and Double Speed Mixing and Kneading Machine, the
Automatic New Patent Dough Scaling and Dividing Machine, for
accurately and mechanically dividing, weighing, and delivering to
Moulding Tables Loaf Bread Drmghs, from largest to smallest sizes,
without being touched by hand, and without being previously weighed
into the machine ; the Table New Patent Dough Divider (for hand),
for Rolls, Buns, Scones, &c. ; Sponge Tub Lifting Machine, Patent
Self-sustaining Safety Sack Lifts and Hoists, for hand and power; New
Enamelled Mixing Troughs, the Bailey-Baker Patent Continuous
Baking Ovens, combining the systems of external and internal heating,
with Patent Lighting Arrangement, Pyrometers, and fitted with
Vienna Bread Steam Pipe Connections, one Oven having Furnace in
front and one at the back end, showing system of Lift and Hinge
Oven Doors. Cake Making Machines ; The New Arm Beater and
Cylindrical Machines for Butter Batters, the Morton, Griffith, and
Waddall Whisks and Sponge Cake Beaters, the Baker-Cadisch Double
Beater Machine, for Angel’s Cakes and Light Mixtures, Baker’s Patent
Fruit Cleaning and Drying Machines, Peel Cutting Machines, Almond
Blanching and Husk Separating Machine, Almond Mills and Granite
Rollers for making Almond Paste, Gas Hot Plate for Muffins,
Crumpets, Ac. Biscuit Machinery : Baker’s New Patent Vertical
Mixing Machine for Hard and Soft Doughs, with Automatic Raising
and Lowering Motion for the Spindles and Mixers ; No. 5 Heavy
Reversing Brake Rollers, 32 x 12 ; Improved New Design Hard and
Soft Dough Cutting Machine for all kinds of Fancy Biscuits, with
new Skip Motion, Continuous Gauge Motion, and with Baker’s New
Patent Silent Pawl and Ratchet Motion. Miniature Model Biscuit
Factory, replete withWorking Models of above Machines, and Patent
Travelling or Chain Oven, Patent Reel Oven, Patent Automatic Sugar
Wafer Making and Baking Machine. Sifting, Fruit Cleaning and Cake
Making Machines, driven by Miniature Steam Engine. Confectionery
and Chocolate Making : Patent Sugar Mill and Sifter, Gas Heated Sugar
Boiling Stoves, Pouring Plates and Slabs, Drop Roller Machines,
Candy and Tablet Cutting Machines, the Hurry Patent Combined
Lozenge Pinning, Printing, Stamping, Cutting, and Spreading Machine ;
Turn-table Chocolate Mixer, Granite Roller Chocolate Refiner, Rapping
Tables, Moulds, Presses, &c. Ice Cream Making in Operation : The
Kirchoff PerrauR and Rapid Patent Freezers, for hand and steam
power. Showroom of Latest Improved Hand Machines, Moulds,
Tools, and Utensils for the Baking and Confectionery Trades. Model
Restaurant Fittings, Urns, Tables, Show Stands, Fancy Scales, &c.
m
1 ^:
:*• ’I
664 Mather and Platt, Salford
Mancliester.
Patent Cylinder Filter for the treatment of large quantities of
liquids, especially water, and for removing from the same solid,
greasy, or slimy matter ; also applicable for treating sewage. Each
filter consists of two vertical perforated metal tubes, one placed
within the other, the space between them being filled with sawdust,
charcoal, or other filtering material. The liquid to be filteied has to
enter through the perforations in the outer cylinder, or tube, and,
after passing through the filtering material, is collected in the inner
tube, whence it is conveyed into the service pipes.
665 The Babcock and Wilcox Co., Glasgow and New York ;
107, Hope-street, Glasgow; works, Kilbowie, near
Glasgow.
Babcock and Wilcox Patent Water-Tube Boiler, of 173h.-p.
666 Th WAITES Brothers, Limited, Vulcan Iron Works,
Bradford, Yorkshire.
Stewart’s Patent Rapid Iron Melting Cupola and Receiver.
Will melt five tons of pig iron and scrap per hour, with five cwts. of
coke. The internal lining is Grayson Lowood’s Gannister Bricks.
The quantity of air necessary to melt five tons of iron per hour is
4,000 cubic feet per minute, and the pressure fibs, per square inch.
667 W. H. Bailey & Co., Albion Works, Salford, Manchester.
Bailey’s Patent Vertical Hot Air Engine. Bailey’s Patent
Horizontal Hot Air Engine. Double-barrelled Crank Pump. Portable
Garden Pump.
668 The Butterley Co., Butterley Iron Works, Alfreton,
Derbyshire.
Steel Bulb Angle, 100 feet long. Steel Bulb Tee, 76ft. long,
kneed and cambered. Iron Rolled Girder, 60ft. long. Round Steel
Bar, 60ft. long. Steel Plate, lift. 6in. by 9ft., by |in. thick. Steel
Hemisphere. Steel Ingot. Hammered Steel Slab. Steel
Galloway Tubes. Collection of Sections and Worked Samples of
Iron and Steel. Cast-iron Water or Gas Pipes, from 36in.
diameter downwards. Block of Coal from our Butterley Collieries,
Derbyshire. Block of Ironstone from our Silverdale Mines, North
Staffordshire.
669 Ontario Pump Co„ Toronto, Canada, and 25, Gunter
Grove, Fulham-road, London, S.W.
10ft. Halladay Standard Windmill, attached to pump in working
order. Model of a Pumping Windmill. General Purpose Pump.
Deep Well Pump for Hand or Power use. Force, or Lift Pump, for
hand use.
EXHIBITS IN GROUNDS OF MACHINERY SECTION.
155
670 A. Shirlaw & Co., Suffolk Works, Berkley -street,
Birmingham.
Two h.-p. Nominal Spiel’s Patent Petroleum Engine, driving an
Edison D}uiamo and installation of 30 incandescent lamps. Half h.-p.
Nominal Spiel’s Patent Petroleum Engine, driving a No. 3 Bailey’s
Harlech Strap Pump, raising about 4,000 gallons of water an hour to
a height of about 30ft. Four h.-p. Nominal Spiel’s Patent Petroleum
Engine; to be seen at work when required. Five man power Nominal
Vertical Spiel’s Patent Petroleum Engine, working. Collection of
Screwing and Lifting Tackle, consisting of Screwing Machines, Stocks
and Dies, Twist Drills, Patent Twist Drill Grinder, Taps, Tube
Cutters, &c., Screw Jacks and Bears, Hydraulic Jacks and Bears,
Duplex Punching Bears, Pulley Blocks, Jim Crows, &c.
671 Edwin Mansfield & Sons, 28, Barton Arcade, Deans-
gate, Manchester.
Mansfield’s Patent Oil Gas Apparatus for the mannfacture of
gas for illuminating, driving gas engines, cooking and heating.
672 McFarlane, Strang, & Co., Limited, Lochburn Iron
Works, Glasgow.
Samples of 48in. Cast-iron Piping for Bombay Waterworks, and
40iii. Piping for the 'I'hirlmere Aqueduct of the Manchester Corpora-
tion. Smaller Pipes and Connections, Bends, Branches, Ac.
673 Wm. Johnson, Castleton Foundry, Armley-road, Leeds.
Kennedy’s Semi-dry Brick, Tile, Cement and Concrete Block
and Seedcake Making Machine. Brick and Tile and Soap Moulding
and Printing Machine. Pugmill Hand-lever Brick and Tile Pressing
Machine. Otto Gas Engine. Samples of Bricks, Tiles, Ac.
675 Manchester Creamery, Anthony Hailwood, Proprietor,
Manchester Creamery, Broughton.
Working Dairy, Composed of Machines of the Latest Inventions for
Testing Milk. SepaiTing Cream from Milk. Churning Cream into
Butter, and separating Butter Milk from Butter.
676 Henry C^sar, Rustic Works, Knutsford, Cheshire.
Rustic Houses, Arches, Bridges, Porches, Seats, Chairs, Tables,
Vases, Ac.
677 E. H, Shorland, St. Gabriel’s Works, Erskine-street,
Manchester, and Imperial Buildings, Ludgate Circus,
London, E.C.
Warm Air Generating Manchester Grate, with Front, and Marble
Mantelpiece (in action). Warm Air Generating Manchester Grate,
with Princess Louise Front and Mantelpiece (in action). Warm Air
Generating Manchester Stove, with patent projecting canopy to rise
156
SECTION II.
and fall (in action). Warm Air Generating Manchester Grates and
Stoves. Finished Grate Fronts, with Tiled Cheeks. Pair Tiled
Slabbed Cheeks. Roof Extract Ventilator. Soil Pipe Ventilator.
Chimneybreast Extract Ventilators. Shorland’s Patent Vertical
Ventilating Tubes. Wroiight-iron Carriage Gates. Wrought-iron
Four- sided Finials.
678 T. J. Constantine, 61, Fleet-street, London, E.C.
Portable Iron House, in grounds, containing Constantine’s newly-
improved Patent Treasure Smoke-consuming Cooking Ranges and
Stoves, having self-contained flues combined with the Patent Fuel
Elevator for raising the fire to the surface under the hot plate.
Patent Treasure Cooking Pots and Cooking Utensils.
680 Wm. Wilson & Co., 50, King-street, Manchester.
Patent Eagle Ranges, with iron flues and adjustable firebox, open
and closed fire, tiled coverings, tiled mantel. Patent Yorkshire Ranges,
with ovens and bath boilers. Patent Yorkshire Ranges, with ovens
and boilers. Eagle Grills.
681 Eu Halliday & Co., Royal Horticultural Worka,
Middleton, near Manchester.
Ornamental Conservatory, with Encaustic and Enamelled Tile
Ornamentation. Halliday’s Patent Adjustable Plant Frame. Halli-
day’s Improved Plant Frame. Halliday’s Ordinary Plant Frame.
Patent Dry Glazing. Hot Water Boilers.
682 E. C. & J. Keay, Cyclops Works, West Bromwich; and
Corporation-street, Birmingham.
Iron Roof, Ornamental Gates, Palisading, Railings, Field Gates,
Iron Fencing and Hurdles.
683 Davis and Sneade, Charters-street, Vauxhall-road,
Liverpool.
Manufacturers of French Buit and Mill Stones, Rice and Flour
Mill Engineers. Millstones for English and Foreign Wheat, Rice,
Spice, Seed, Cement, Coprolite, and Manure Grinding. Millstones
for Barytes, Paint, and Chemical Grinding.
684 Royal National Lifeboat Institution, 14, John-street,
Adelphi, London ; Manchester Branch, 9, Albert Square,
J. Corbett, hon. sec.
Self-righting Lifeboat of the newest type, 34ft. long, 7ft. Gin.
beam, pulling 10 oars, fitted with water-ballast tanks, in addition to
an iron keel of lOcwt. and lOcwt. of cork-ballast. Candage for
transporting the lifeboat by land, and for launching it through surf.
(N.B. See also Models on Stand 191.)
685 John Lysaght, Limited, St. Vincents Iron Works,
Bristol.
Section of Iron Railway Station suitable for export, and specimen
showing the different stages of manufacture from the pig-iron to the
galvanised sheet. Wire Netting and other Galvanised Manufactures.
Photographs of Constructional Ironworks, Roof Girders, &c.
686 David Lowe & Sons, Gilmore Park, Edinburgh ; and
Cornbrook, Cbester-road, Manchester.
Ornamental Conservatory, 24ft. by 24ft. Garden Frames.
Boilers. Garden Seats.
687 The Croft Granite, Brick, and Concrete Co., Croft,
near Leicester.
Summerhouses in Croft Adamant. Three Summerhouses built
of Slabs of Croft Adamant and decorated with mouldings of the same.
688 E. F. Blakeley & Co., 27 and 29, Hatton Garden, and
Hodson-street, Liverpool.
Ornamental Iron Billiard or Lawn Tennis, &c.. Pavilion.
688a Arden Hill and Co., 14, 16, and 18, Constitution
Hill, Birmingham.
Gas Cooking Ovens, Coffee Roasters, Boiling Stoves, Lacquering
Table, Japanning Oven, Furnaces, Blow-pipes, Laundry Soldering
Irons, Water Heaters and Gas Baths, Asbestos Fires, Fire Lighters,
and General Hot Water Apparatus.
689 John Smith, Rustic Works, Stretford.
Rustic Houses.
689a Brown and Backhouse, Chatham Works, Chatham-
street, Liverpool.
Canadian Toboggan Slide, Stobbs and White’s Patent.
H d
SECTION III.
CHEMICAL AND ALLIED INDUSTRIES.
GROUP I.— CHEMICAL AND CHEMICAL-PHYSICAL
APPLIANCES AND APPARATUS.
701 W. H. Bailey & Co., Albion Works, Salford, Man-
chester.
Hydrochloric Acid Pump, Hargreaves and Robinson’s patent.
Stop Cocks for hydrochloric acid. Bailey’s Patent Semi-fluid Stop
Valves. Lead-lined Valves for acids and sours. Bleaching Liquor
Pump for raising acids and sours. Regulus Metal Pump for raising
acids and chemicals that are injurious to iron and brass. Demerara
Steam Pump for raising salt water. Steam Pump for rum and other
spirits. Harlech Pattern Steam Pump for ammoniacal liquor for
gasworks. Baile}^’s Steam Air Compressor. Bailey’s Patent
Pressure Recorder for absorbing columns.- Bailey’s Patent Pyrometer
for blast furnaces. Bailey’s Patent Pyrometer for ja'panners’ stoves.
Bailey’s Patent Pyrometer, army pattern, as used in portable ovens
for the army in the field. Bailey’s Patent Biscuit Baker’s Pyrometer.
Bailey’s Patent Civil Engineer’s Pyrometer. Bailey’s Patent Pyro-
meter for locomotives and marine boilers. Bailey’s Patent Confec-
tioner’s Pyrometer. Bailey’s Patent Pyrometei for Hargreaves and
Robinson’s process. Carr’s Patent Laboratory Mill. Hewitt’s
Patent Automatic Pestle and Mortar. Bailey’s Patent Draught
Gauge, indicating the velocity of gases in flues. Drawings of Bailey’s
Patent Tide Recorder. An assortment of Cocks and Valves, Plugs
and Seatings, used in chemical works, gas works, bleach works, and
other manufacturing operations. A collection of Apparatus for
. indicating speed and pressure. A collection of Apparatus used by
those engaged in obtaining statistics in manufacturing operations.
Bailey’s Absolute Vacuum Gauge for showing the vacuum pressure in
condensers, and its relation to barometrical pressure of the atmos-
phere. Bailey’s Patent Cement Tester, Eddystone Lighthouse
pattern. Thurston’s Patent Oil Tester, railway pattern. Ingram
and Stapfer’s Oil Tester.
1 702 Doulton & Co., 17, Deansgate, Manchester, and
Lambeth Pottery, London.
Acid Pipes, Pumps, Stoneware Taps, from pn. to Gin. bore,
Retorts, Stills, Receivers, Condensing Worms, Store Jars, Chlorine
162
SECTION III.
Retorts, Uuglazed Chemical Pipes for boiling in tar, Specimen of Hydro-
chloric Pipes which have been in absolute use. Stoneware Jars and
Bottles, with patent screw stoppers to Sin. diameter. 24in.
diameter Stoneware Pipes, free from iron, for towers. Plumbago
and other Crucibles, and Fire-standing Goods.
703 Follows and Bate, Limited, Froxmer Street, Gorton,
Manchester.
Edge Runner Mill, with gi’anite rollers 18x6, and granite bed 2ft.
diameter. Hardwood Hopper, in segments, for mixing and grinding
crystals, powders, drugs, pastes, colours, <fec. Drug Mill for grinding
dry friable materials, such as ginger, gentian, copperas, &c. Powerful
Tincture Press, designed so that no part of the material to be
operated upon may come in contact with iron or any other metallic
substance ; size of hopper 9 gallons ; pressure of plunger, 6 tons.
Small Circular Iron Tincture Press for chemists; size, 1 gallon. Wine
Press; size, 65 gallons. Grape Cnisher;size of rollers, 29 in. x Tin.
Assortment of Granite Pestles and Mortars. Assortment of
Seltzogenes. Assortment of Hand Power Horizontal Mixers for
mixing light powders, liquids, semi-liquids, and so]uble compounds.
704 Joseph W. Lovibond, 26, Saint Ann-street, Salisbury,
Wilts.
The Tintometer. An apparatus for measuring colour. Arranged
in sets, showing its application to glass, fabrics, dyes, malt, beer,
wines and spirits, sugars, caramels, carbon in steel, oils, and colours.
705 Joseph Davis, k Co., Fibzroy Works, 6, Kennington
Park-road, London, S.E.
Royal Polytechnic and other Barometers, in Classic, Gothic, Early
English, composite and hincy pattern frames of various woods.
Optical and Scientific Instruments.
706 Adam Millar & Co., 45, Montrose-street, Glasgow.
Insulated Wires, ordinary round section. Insulated Wires, flat or
ribbon form, Millar’s patent. Insulated Compound Laminated
Conductors, formed by combining a number of flat wires so as to
produce heavy rectangular conductors, possessing an extra degree
of flexibility. Insulated Conductors, with flexible protecting sheath
of narrow ribbon wire wound on the outside of the insulating
material. Electric Current-Meters, Professor Blyth’s patent.
Magnetometers for measuring magnetic intensity. Secondary
Batteries.
707 Shaw and Connolly, Alexandra Works, Varley-street,
Manchester.
Electrical Wires and Cables, including special leads for ship
lighting, electric fittings for installations of electric lighting.
CHEMICAL AND ALLIED INDUSTRIES.
708 Edward Ward, F.K.M.S , 249, Oxford-street, Manchester.
Microscopes and Appliances for Microscopical Investigation,
including apparatus and materials for the collection, preparation,
and examination of pond life, entomological and general natural
history objects, together with mounted slides, and unmounted
specimens ; also, photographic apparatus and lantern slides of
scientific subjects.
710 Harden Star and Sinclair Fire Appliance Co.,
Limited, Cathedral Steps, Victoria-street, Manchester.
General Assortment of Fire Appliances, including chemical fire
engines, automatic sprinklers, hand fire grenades, fire hose, unions,
branch pipes, spreading nozzles, hand pumps, leather buckets, smoke
respirators, &c. The new Industrial Light Lucigen, and apparatus
for same. The Electrogen, for preventing incrustation and corrosion
in steam boilers. Hannay’s Deep-sea Sounding Apparatus Bathy-
meter. Samples of Hannay’s Caledonian White Lead.
711 Otto Wolters, 55, Upper Marylebone-street, Portland
'Place, London, W.
Assay, Chemical, and Bullion Balances. Wolter’s Improved
Short-beamed Analytical Balances.
712 Joseph Casartelli, 43, Market-street, Manchester;
works, Clarence-street, Cheetham, Manchester.
Transit Theodolites. Ordnance Theodolites. Level, with divided
circle for taking horizontal angles. Level, plain, without circle.
Y Level, with divided circle. Miner’s Dial, Casartelli’s patent.
Mining Theodolite. Biram’s Anemometer. Large and small
Dickinson’s Anemometers. Improved Airmeters. Engine-divided
Circular Protractors. Standard Engineers’ Levels. Brass Engineers’
Levels. Brass Vertical Levels. Portable Hydraulic Test Pump for
boilers. Richard’s Indicator. Admiralty Pattern Indicator.
Admiralty Pattern Indicator for gas engines. Admiralty
Pattern Indicator for high-speed engines. Set Indicator Springs,
from 61b. to 6001b. per square inch. Pressure Test Indicator, for
testing steam gauges, &c. Indicator Gear for cylinders up to 3ft.
long. Casartelli’s Engine Counter, in brass case. Casartelli’s Engine
Counter, in iron case. Speed Tests. Mercurial Vacuum Gauge,
brass case, with door. Vacuum Gauge, without door. Thermometer
Gauges for economisers, steam pipes, &c. Casartelli’s Pyrometer.
Patent I lot-blast Pyrometers, for blast-smelting furnaces, &c. New
Microscope Cloth Counting Glasses. Set Folding Cloth Counting
Glasses. Set Thermometers, Hydrometers, &c., for brewers’ and
spirit merchants’ use. Set Thermometers for dyers and calico
printers. Set Thermometers for chemical purposes. Set Clinical
Thermometers. Set Glass Hydrometers for chemical and com-
mercial purposes.
k’
64 SECTION III.
713 Fkanz Muller, Bonn u. Bhine, Germany.
Collection of Aerometers and Thermometers. Apparatus for
Volumetric Analysis. Collection of Geissler’s Chemical Apparatus.
Collection of Geissler Tubes and Crookes Apparatus. Collection of
Geissler Glass Stop Cocks. Collection of several New Apparatus
made of glass, viz., Brogger’s, Norblad’s, Petterson’s, and Ilich-
dorlF’s.
714 Weldon’s Celorine Processes Co., Limited, 19, Great
George -street, W estminster.
Model of Weldon’s Chlorine Plant, &c.
715 F. C. Bein & Son, 108, Strand, London.
Acoustic Instruments for deafness. Acoustic Chairs and Model of
Acoustic Pulpit. Audiphone. Acoustic Walking Sticks, Conversa-
tional Tubes, Ac.
716 Committee of Section III.
Collection of Geissler Tubes in Motion.
717 William Allen, Union Brass and Iron Works, Great
Ancoats, Manchester.
Filter Press for chemical and sewage purposes. Pumping
Engine for general purposes. Improved .\cid Egg Valve. W. Allen’s
Patent Acid Resisting Metal Cocks for chemical purposes. Vitriol
and other Valves.
718 Henry Simon, 20, Mount-street, Manchester.
Model of Simon-Carves Recuperative Coke Oven, narrow oblong
chamber, surrounded by longitudinal combustion flues. Model of
Simon’s Continuous Ammonia Still. Drawings : Sectional drawing
of Simon-Carves Coke Oven, Sulphate of Ammonia Works of
Stafford Corporation, Pure Liquid Ammonia Works at Michigan.
Samples : Coke and By-Products from Simon-Carves Ovens;
Benzol from Gas ; Ammonia Products made by Simon’s Apparatus.
719 Bex Bituminous Coal Co., Hulme Lock Wharf, Hulme
Hall- road, Manchester.
Improvement in Patent Fuel.
720 Mottefshead & Co., 7, Exchange-street, and 10, Half-
Moon-street, Manchester.
Chemical and Physical Apparatus for works or private labora-
tories, schools, science classes, Ac.
CHEMICAL AND. ALLIED INDUSTRIES.
165
721 The East Lancashire Chemical Co., Fairfield, near
Manchester ; and 43, Market-street, Manchester.
Plant for Bleaching Cotton and Linen Yarn and Cloth l)y the
Blanchine Process, dispensing with the use of lime. Samples of
Cloth that have been Bleached with Blanchine, and afterwards dyed
various colours. Samples of White Goods ready for the market.
Starch Substitute for stiffening purposes. Goods that have been
stiffened by the same starch substitute. Alizarine White Grounds,
Soap, Soluble Oil, Oleine Oil, Glycerine Substitute, Softening Paste,
and Sizing Tallow. Patent Bone Size Substitute for fustian goods.
Samples of goods that have been stiffened with Patent Bone Size
Substitute.
722 John Heywood, Deansgate and Ridgefield, Manchester.
Chemical Laboratory Table, fitted up with the newest and
most improved forms of apparatus for the supply of gas and water,
with fume closets on table top, tube draw^ers, and cupboards com-
plete.
722a James Woolley, Sons, & Co., Market-street,
Manchester.
Chemical Apparatus and Scientific Instruments used in the
demonstration and practical study of chemistry, and in the arts and
manufactures ; including the newest forms of apparatus for fractional
distillations, specific gravities, vapour densities, fat extractions, \vater,
gas, and other analyses, &c.
GROUP II.— HYGIENE.
723 Mottershead & Co., 7, Exchange-street, Manchester.
Benger’s Preparations of the Natural Digestive Ferments.
Peptonised (partially digested) foods, and peptonising fluids and
powTlers.
724 Burroughs, Wellcome, & Co., Snow Hill Buildings,
London, E.C.
Lanoline ; a purified w'ool-fat. Lanoline Pomade. Lanoline
Soap. Lanoline Eucalyptine Soap. Lanoline Cold Cream. Lanoline
Hoof Ointment.
725 James Woolley, Sons, & Co., Market-street, Man-
chester ; laboratories, Knowsley- street, Cheetham.
Antiseptic Preparations and other Articles for Nursery and
Toilet Use. The Sanitary Rose Powder, Phenate of Soda Solution,
Perfumery, &c.
166
SECTION III.
726 Me Dougall Bros., 68, Port-street, Manchester; 10,
Mark-lane, London, E.C.; and Irk Yale Chemical Works.
Carbolic and Sulphurous Disinfectants, in powders, fluids, and
soaps. Carbolic -Acids — various crystal and liquid — for medical and
manufacturing purposes. Soluble Disinfecting Powder. Carbolic
Purifier or Soluble Phenyle. Carbolic Soaps. Carbolic Fumigator.
Sulphm’ous Fumigator.
727 Morris, Little & Son, Doncaster.
Soluble Phenyle Disinfectant and Deodoriser, prepared from
the distillates of coal-tar. Sanitary Phenyle Powder. Phenyle
Toilet Soap. Phenyle Household Soap. Phenyle Dog Soap.
728 WiNSER & Co., Harter-street, Manchester; works,
Warrington, Lancashire; mills. Keg worth, Leicester-
shire; mines, Gotham, Nottinghamshire.
Salufer, antiseptic and disinfectant. Chloride of Zinc. Chloride
of Magnesium. Chloride of Barium. Epsom Salts. Glaubers
Salts. Alum Cake. Sulphate of Alumina. Sulphate of Lime in
different forms. Cements. Rockery Stone. China Clay. Italian
and French Chalk. Sulphate of Baryta. Whiting. Ultramarine.
Ochre and Umber.
729 F. J. Harrison & Co., Limited ; works, Watling-street,
and Canning-street, Leicester ; London offices, 75 & 76,
High Holborn, W.C.
Hydroleine Sanitary Soap Powder ; also Hydroleine for wool
scourers, woollen manufacturers, dyers, and other trades. Hydrated
Soap Powder. Sanitary Disinfecting Powder.
730 Swan and Leach, 3, Princess-street, Albert-square,
Manchester.
Jeyes’ Sanitary Compounds. Perfect Purifier, Disinfectant
Fluid, Sanitary Powder, Disinfectant Household, Toilet, and Poultry
Soaps, and Soft Soaps. Non-poisonous Sheep Dip.
GROUP III.— DESTRUCTIVE DISTILLATION.
731 J. C. SiEGERiST, 41, Faulkner-street, Manchester.
Prepared and Unprepared Colours for Calico Printing and
Dyeing (Wool and Cotton), Albumens, Gums, Glycerines, and
Sundry Chemicals. Two Frames, containing Print Samples
printed with the above-mentioned colours.
CHEMICAL AND ALLIED INDUSTRIES.
167
732 Brooke, Simpson, and Spiller, Limited, Patentees and'
Manufacturers of Aniline Colours, Atlas Works,
Hackney Wick, London, E. ; depot, 106, Portland-
street, Manchester.
Aniline Dyes, and Chemicals from which the same are made.
Sundry Dyed and Printed Patterns, on silk and other fabrics, to
show various applications of the said dyes.
733 Alfred Parton, 164, Aston Load, Birmingham.
Condensed Aniline Dyes, for marking, printing, &c., in per-
manent colours.
734 Fahlberg, List, & Co., Saccharine Works, Salbke,
Westerhtisen, near Magdeburg.
Saccharine.
735 B. Kuhn (agent for L. Durand, and Huguenin, of Basle),
55, Bloom-street, Manchester, and 36, St. Mary-at-Hill,
London, E.C.
Aniline Colours for dyeing and printing wool, cotton, silk, Ac.,
with patterns to show the application. Special leather colours with
patterns. Salol Anti-rheumatic. Antifibrine for medicinal purposes.
736 The . British Alizarine Co., Limited, Silvertown,
Victoria Docks, London, E.
Specimens of Anthracene, the raw material used in the produc-
tion of the colouring matters. Alizarine, Anthrapurpurin, and
Flavopurpurin, which are substances employed in the d3^eing and
printing of cotton and woollen fabrics, yarns, Ac. Specimens of
the products, illustrating the various stages of manufacture, from
Anthracene up to Alizarine, Anthrapurpurin and Flavopurpurin ; also
Specimens exhibiting the chemical properties of these colouring
matters. Specimens of Printed and Dyed Fabrics, Yarns, Ac.,
illustrating the practical application of Alizarine, Anthrapurpurin, and
Flavopurpurin. Specimens of Prints, Ac., prepared with the products
of Madder ; also Specimens of the Madder Plant and the various
products derived therefrom.
737 Dan Dawson Brothers, Milne Bridge Chemical Works,
Huddersfield.
Coal-tar Colours and Chemicals.
738 Manchester Aniline Co. (Chas. Truby & Co.), 55, High-
street, Manchester ; works, Clifton Junction, near
Manchester.
Coal-tar Products and Chemicals for calico printers and dyers.
168
SECTION III,
739 Charles Lowe & Co., Manufacturing Chemists, Reddish,
near Stockport ; and 43, Piccadilly, Manchester.
Carbolic Acid in its various stages of manufacture, from the
crude to the pure product, together with resultant by-products,
viz., Cresol, Pyro-Cresol, Napthaline, Ac. Colouring Mattel's directly
prepared from Carbolie Acid, viz.. Picric Acid, Aurine, Azurophenoline,
Clirysophenoline, together with Dyed Specimens showing shades
obtainable by their use. Medicinal and Disinfecting Preparations of
Carbolic Acid, viz., Sulpho-carbolates, Disinfecting Powder and Fluids.
740 Saint Denis Dyestuff and Chemical Co., Limited;
works, St. Denis, Paris, France ; Manchester office, 3,
Booth-street, Mosley-street.
Colouring Matters derived from coal tar and allied products,
with specimens of textiles, showing results obtainable upon cotton,
wool, and silk, and other animal and vegetable fibres.
Exhibits of Chemical Research by
741 Sir Henry E. Roscoe, M.P., F.R.S., 64, Queens Gate,
South Kensington, S.W., London ; Victoria Park,
Manchester.
Collection of Pure Vanadium and Tungsten, with compounds
of those rare metals, illustrative of Roscoe’s researches. (Roscoe’s
discovery of Vanadium, in deposits near Alderley and elsewhere, and
of methods for preparing compounds, led to the use of Vanadium for
printing aniline black.)
741a Edward Schunck, Ph.D., F.R.S., Kersal, near Man-
chester.
Complete collection illustrative of Schunck’s researches on the
principles contained in Madder. Quercitron and the Cotton Fibre.
Chromogens from Lichens, Ac. Constituents of Natural Indigo.
Colouring Matters and other Compounds from Madder.
741b J. Peter Griess, Ph.D., F.R.S. (the discoverer of the
Diazo reaction and of the Azo colours). Burton- on-
Trent.
Specimens illustrating the discovery of the Diazo and Azo
compounds and colours, by Griess.
741c W. H. Perkin, Ph.D., F.R.S. (the discoverer of the
first coal-tar colour. Mauve, and the originator of the
coal-tar colour industry). The Chestnuts, Sudbury,
Harrow, near London.
Specimens illustrating the discovery of Mauve, the first aniline
dye. Specimen of Mauve as fii*st made by Perkin in 1858. Mauveine
and its salts. Pamsafranine as first obtained by oxidising Mauveine.
Sketch of First Coal-Tar Colour Works in 1858. Fii'st aniline printing
CHEMICAL AND ALLIED INDUSTRIES.
169
colour (Acetyl or Perkin’s Green). Specimens illustrating the manu-
facture of Alizarin from Anthracene, by Perkin’s (the English) process.
Pure Alizarin Compounds. Specimen of Coumarin, the odoriferous
principle of Tonka Bean, first artificially prepared by Perkin.
Specimen of Cinnamic Acid, first artificially prepared by Perkin, from
coal-tar materials, and now used for preparing artificial indigo.
742 I. Levinstein & Co., Manchester.
Coal-Tar Products. Raw materials, intermediate products, and
colouring matters, benzene, toluene, xyleneaniline, toluidine,
xylidine, cumidine, methyl and ethyl aniline, diphenylamine, Ac.,
Ac., and about 100 different coal-tar dyes, with illustrations of their
applications to various kinds of material.
743 Society of Chemical Industry in Basle, Switzerland.
Artificial Colours, Coal-Tar Colours, Aniline, Naphthaline,
Resorcine, Anthracene Colours, and various raw and intermediate
products.
744 Sadler & Co., Limited, Cleveland Chemical Works,
Middlesbrough.
Coal-Tar Products, crude and refined. Alizarine, Aniline, and
other Coal-Tar Dyes. Acids, Alkalis, and other Chemicals.
745 Hohenhausen & Co., Yew Tree Chemical Works, 303,
Collyhurst-road, Manchester.
Aniline Salt, Aniline Oil, Alizarine Oil, Arseniate, and Binar-
seniate of Soda, Acetate of Chrome, Sulpho cyanide Salts, Fast Black,
Fast Chocolate.
746 Hardman and Holdens, Miles Platting, Manchester.
A Collection of Crude and Purified Products illustrating the
manufacture of commercial alizarine from coal tar. Specimens of
Dyed and Printed Goods, showing the application of alizarine to
cotton, silk, wool, Ac.
747 Hardman & Co., Manufacturing Chemists, Miles
Platting, Manchester.
A collection illustrating the manufacture of useful products
from residuals obtained in the manufacture of gas. The exhibit
includes crude and purified products obtained from coal tar,
ammoniacal liquor, and spent oxide. Model of plant required in
some of these manufactures.
748 The Linlithgow Oil Co., Limited, Edinburgh; and
4, St. Ann’s Square, Manchester.
Crude Mineral or Shale Oil, Burning Oil, Heavy or Lubricating
Oil, Gas or Cleaning Oil, Naphtha (hard scale, 118-120 melting
point ; soft scale, 90-95 melting point). Sulphate of Ammonia,
Refined Paraffin Wax, Still Coke, Ac., Ac.
J
n
sS-
170
SECTION TIL
749 Price’s Patent Candle Co., Limited, Belmont Works,
Battersea, London, S.W.
Specimens of Cloth and Wool Oils, Lubricating Oils, Price’s
Glycerine, Stearine, Paraffin.
750 The Broxburn Oil Co., Limited, 28, Royal Exchange
Square, Glasgow.
Bituminous Shale and Products therefrom, including burning
oil, lubricating oil, gas oil, paraffin scale, wax, candles, sulphate of
ammonia, &c.
751 The Dee Oil Co., Haworth’s Buildings, 5, Cross-
street, Manchester, and Saltney- Chester, and London,
Liverpool, Newcastle, Barrow.
Lubricating Oils, Cylinder Oils, Valvolines, Medicinal Oils,
Vaselines, and Oleum Deelinse. Wax Candles, and Paraffin Wax.
752 J. C. AND J. Field, 15, Upper Lambeth Marsh, London.
Bees Wax, Spermaceti, Stearin, Paraffin and Ozokerit, in block
and candles. Domestic and Ornamental Candles and Nightlights of all
kinds. United Service, Samphire, and other Toilet Soaps. Pure
Oil and other Dyers’ Soaps.
GROUP IV.
LAKES, PIGMENTS, PAINTS, AND
VARNISHES.
753 Rawlins and Son, Brook Works, Rainhill, Prescot.
Specimens of Ultramarine and Smalts, finished and in various
stages of manufacture. The Raw Materials used therein, and speci-
mens of manufactured goods illustrating the uses of these pigments.
754 Charles Scheu, 2, Cumberland-street, Manchester, and
65, West Regent-street, Glasgow.
Ultramarine Colours (blue, green, violet). Lime Blue. Model
Furnace for manufacturing Ultramarine.
Raw materials for making
Ultramarine Blue.
Robt. Ingham Clark & Co., West Ham Abbey, and
Leaden hall House, London, E.C.
A Trophy Collection of the Fossilised Resins used in the manu-
facture of varnish. Articles illustrating the application of varnishes.
William Pakeman, Manchester-road, Stockport.
Pigment Colours for calico printers. Colours for paper stainers,
paper printers, paper manufacturers, lithogi'aphers and paint
grinders ; and all shades of quick drying Enamel Paints, Ac. All
free from arsenic.
757 Henry Crookes, A.E.S.M., M.S.T.E., 4, Westminster
Chambers, London, S.W.
Heat Indicating Paint (Crookes’s patent).
758 Jos. B. Freeman & Co., Grove Works, Lombard-road,
Battersea, London
Kiosk, painted with Patent Non-poisonous White Lead.
Samples of the Lead, and boards painted with it, and subjected
to the action of volatile sulphur fumes.
759 Ell AM, Jones & Co., Markeaton Mills, Derby.
Emery, Paints, Colours, Barytes, Oxides of Iron, and all
Mineral Colours. Varnish.
760 Smith, Powers & Co., Priory Varnish Works, Coventry.
Collection of Varnishes. Specimens of Gums used in the
Manufacture of Varnish. Smith and Wildigg’s Patent Rotary Bottle
Cleaning Machine.
761 Donald Macpherson & Co., Manchester Paint and
Colour Works, Knott Mill, Manchester; and 106,
Cannon Street, London.
A Kiosk, illustrating the use of Foochow Enamels, Metallic
Paints for exterior use, Quick-drying Enamels not needing stoving.
Vases, Bricks, and Timber enamelled with Quick-drying Chinese
Foochow Enamel.
762 Goadsby & Co.; office, 2, 4, and 6, Albert Bridge;
works, Newton Heath, Manchester.
Colours, Paints, Varnishes, Chemicals.
763 Griffiths Brothers & Co., 6, Dashwood House, 9, New
Broad-street, London, E.C.
Agnol, washable water paint. Pyrodene Fire-proof Paint, for
fire-proofing wood, canvas, &c. Vitros Bath Enamel for enamelling
baths, &c., without stoving. Vitros Ordinary Enamel. Griffiths’s
Patent Zinc White.
764 William Taylor & Co., Limited, Taylor s Wharf, Lime-
house, London; Walter B. Taylor & Co., White-
chapel, Liverpool.
Paints, Colours, and Varnishes. Linseed Oils, boiled and refined.
Patent Snow-white Zinc Paint. Anti-fouling and Anti-corrosive
Compositions for Ships’ Bottoms and Submerged Works. Fresco and
Enamel Paints. Patent Rubber Paint. Registered Imperial
Boiled Drying Oil. Registered Pollox Oil. Magnetic Oxides and
Chemicals.
172
SECTION ITT.
765 John E. Williams k Co., Victoria Paint Works,
Manchester.
Metallic Oxide Paints (non-poisoiious), in black, white, and
colours. Metallic Oxide Enamels (non-poisonoiis and qiiick-diying),
in black, white, and colours.
766 Thomas Fewster k Son, 44 and 44^, Sykes-street, Hull.
Varnishes. Varnish Stains. Paints. Colours.
767 R. R. Minton k Co., Cheapside, Liverpool; and 25 k 27,
Bridge-street, Manchester.
Colours, Varnishes, Oils, &c., &c.
768 The Sheffield Varnish Co., Limited, Oughty Bridge,
near Sheffield.
Tubes of various Varnishes. Gums and Oils used in the
manufacture of Varnish. Panels Stained and Varnished. Tin and
Stone Bottles, labelled and capsuled.
768 a F. & C. Osler, Birmingham and London.
Fluorescent Fountain, playing various coloured waters.
GROUP V.— BLEACHED AND COLOURED FIBRE.
769 James Chadwick & Brother, Eagley Mills, near Bolton.
Sewing, Crochet,^ Knitting, Mending Cottons, and Wool
Mendings, in their various processes of manufiicture.
770 J. and E. Waters k Co., Manufacturers, Talbot Mills,
Ellesmere -street, Hulme, Manchester, and Office, 47,
Mosley-street.
Fac-simile of the Albert Memorial, Manchester, in Sewing
Cottons. Doubled Yarns — Two, Three, and Six Cord Sewings, on
spools, for hand and machine ; Glace Cotton, Crochet Cotton, Knitting
Cotton, Ball Cottons, etc. Worsted and Cotton Braids, Smallwares,
Worsted and Cotton Webs and Bindings, Boot and Shoe Laces,
Corset Laces, Window Lines, Spindle Bandings, etc., Ac.
771 Ermen and Roby, Nassau Mills, Patricroft, and 14,
College Land, Manchester.
Six Cord and Glace (Diamond) Sewing Cottons, on spools and on
cards. Patent Thread for Shoemakers, Tailors, and Saddlers.
Crochet Cotton, in skeins and in balls. Knitting Cotton, Embroidery
Cotton, Diamond Thread (polished) for manufacturing.
CHEMICAL AND ALLIED INDUSTRIES.
173
772 William Oxley, Sewing Cotton and Small wares Manu-
facturers, 97, Great Ancoats-street, Manchester.
Various Sewing, Knitting, Mending, and Crochet Cottons, in
spools, balls, cocoons, and bundles. Rug Cottons, Cotton Cords.
Various Knitting, Mending, and Berlin Wools, in balls, cocoons, and
bundles. Mendings, in merinos, cotton, and wool, on cards. Ice
Wool in balls.
773 J. & P. Coats, Ferguslie Thread Works, Paisley.
Sewing Cotton is shown in all stages of preparation. Tlie
spinning processes are illustrated from the cotton plant to the spun
yarn, and the thread manufacture from the spun yarn to the finished
spool. Spool making is shown in two series, one of which illustrates
the processes from the trunk of a common birch tree to the turned
spool, and the other illustrates the various processes from the im-
ported squares of white birch to the completed spool. The case
contains a model, built with spools of sewing cotton, of the restored
Abbey Church of Paisley.
774 Bagley and Wright, Wellington and Belgrave Mills,
Oldham.
Sewing, Crochet, and Knitting Cottons on spools, in balls, and
in hanks.
775 Edmund Ashworth and Sons, Egerton Mills, Bolton,
Lancashire.
Cotton in the various stages of manufacture. Cop Yarns.
Doubled Yarns in 2, 3, 4, 6, and 9 folds. Sewing Cottons. Crochet
Cottons in skeins, balls, and on reels. Knitting, Mending, and
Embroidering Cottons. Cotton Balls. Linen-finish and Silk-finish
Threads.
776 Kerr and Hoegger, Grimshaw-lane Dyeworks, Newton
Heath, near Manchester.
Dyed Cotton Yarns. Dyed and Sateened Cotton Yarns. Dyed
I and Sateened China Grass. Dyed Woollen Yarns.
777 PiCHARD Moir & Co., Adelphi Works, Accrington ;
office, 24, Corporation-street, Manchester.
Coloured Yarns.
778 Ch. Weber & Co., Thann, Alsace.
Samples of Cotton Yarns dyed in the cops, &c.
779 Select Exhibit of Committee of Section III. Collected
by J. J. Hummel, Yorkshire College.
Series of Woollen Patterns dyed with the natural colouring
matters (dyewoods), and with the artificial colouring matters (coal-
tar colours), also compound shades, dyed with mixtures of three
174
SECTION III.
colouring matters of eacli class. Series of Patterns of Calico Prints,
showing the various styles in vogue during the past 50 years or more,
to illustrate the progress of the chemistry of calico-printing during
this period. Series of Patterns of Cotton and Silk dyed with coal-tar
colours obtained by means of electricity. (Lent by Professor Dr.
Goppelsroeder. ) Apparatus to show the production of aniline black
on cotton, discharge white on indigo blue, &c., by means of electricity.
(Lent hy Frof. Dr. Goj^pelsroeder. )
780 William McFarlane, Millers Brook Dye works,
Heywood, near Manchester.
Dyed Cotton Yarns, in warp and bundle, including Examples of
colours for the “Dhootie,” “ Khakee,” Drill, and general coloured
trade. Lace and Lace Yarns.
781 Select Exhibit of Committee of Section III. Collected
by Watson Smith, The Owens College, Manchester.
MSS and Relics of Dr. John Dalton, the propounder of the
Atomic Theory. Sir Humphry Davy’s Chemical Balance, &c.
Specimens illustrating Schorlemmer’s Researches on the Constituents
of American Petroleum, and on the Paraffins ; and Dale and Schor-
lemmer’s Researches on Aurin and Pararosaniline, Ac. (JFatson
Smith). Specimens of American and Russian Petroleums, also of
Crude Anthracene, obtained by passing Russian Petroleum Residues
through red-hot tubes, and 20 per cent Alizarin Paste prepared from
this Anthracene with piece of printed calico dyed with this Alizarin.
Products extracted by Watson Smith from Coal-tar condensed from
the Gartsherrie Blast Furnaces. Sulphate of Ammonia obtained from
the Crude Condensation Products. Specimens of Bisulphide of
Carbon and Ethylic Alcohol, prepared from crude London benzenes,
pure aromatic hydroearbons, Ac., contained in coal-tar. One
pound each of three varieties of Coal used in mixture in the gas retorts
of the Manchester Gas Works. Plans showing the structure of Fire-
clay Retorts, setting of Retorts, Ac. Parti-coloured Flag, showing
exact amount of dyeing power in one pound of Manchester Gas-coal.
Actual weighed amounts of products obtained from one ton of Man-
chester Gas-coal. Specimens of Indophenol, a lu’oposed substitute
for indigo, with raw materials, and dyed and printed specimens.
Sample of Murexide from Guano, and piece of printed c(d,ton dyed
with it. (The discovery of magenta cpiickly crushed any hopes of
introducing this fugitive though beautiful red). Specimens of products
of the distillation of wood. Pure Methyl Alcohol from wood spirit as
a commercial product. Specimens of Logwood, Red Santal Wood,
Indigofera species, and Seeds of Itinctoria, Ac. Specimens of raw
Jute Fibres, Cotton and Cotton-silks as growing in the pod, Ac.
( Dr. Leech). Set of Cinchona Barks ; of Resins ; of Seed, Stick and
ShelLac. Chinese Insect-wax. Cocoa-nut. Nutmeg in shell and fruit.
Cocaine Plants and Fruit, with active principle. Tamarinds. Iheo-
bromine and its preparations. Kola nut. 20 Commercial Gums.
Guarana, Lignum-Vitie, Quassia Wood, and Quassia. Quillaia Bark for
making effervescing drinks. Khava-Khava. Other active principles,
i
CHEMICAL AND ALLIED INDUSTRIES.
175
barks and fruits. (Fro. W. Boyd Dawkins). Specimens illustrating
the Phosphate trade, Coprolites, Apatites, Ac. Specimen of Austra-
lian Boghead Cannel Coal. Specimen of Scottish Boghead Carmel
Coal (now exhausted). Specimens of Chalk cut from Cannel Tunnel
borings, and illustrating the condition of the chalk strata under the
English Channel.
782 Henry Newall & Son, 10 , Marsden-street, Manchester.
Mechanical and Chemical Wood Pulps used in the manufacture
of paper; also Wood Flour, as used in the manufacture of linoleums,
wall decorations, and other fabrics, as well as in the manufacture of
explosives, Ac.
783 Samuel Barlow & Co., Limited, Stakehill Works,
Castleton, Manchester ; 68, Major-street, Manchester ;
1, Three Tuns Passage, Paternoster Square, London, E.C
Madder Bleached Cloth for Calico Printers. Dyed and Finished
Cotton Piece Goods, colours fast to light and air. Patent Combined
Bookbinders’ Cloth, plain, embossed, and brocaded.
784 Peter Thomas, 75, Princess street, Manchester.
Model of Continuous Cloth Bleaching Machine. Drawing,
showing automatic yarn-bleaching machine ; Drawing, representing
plan of a bleaching machine works ; Samples of Cotton, Linen, Jute,
in raw, yarn, and woven fabrics, bleached by P. Thomas’s process.
GROUP VI.— FINE CHEMICALS, ALKALOIDS,
ESSENCES, AND EXTRACTS.
785 James Woolley, Sons, & Co., Manchester; laboratories
and drug mills, Knowsley-street, Cheetham.
Chemical and Pharmaceutical Preparations and New Remedies,
including Cocain, Antipyrin, Antifebrin, Urethan, Salol, Strophanthus,
Ac. Specimens of Crude Drugs and Impalpable Powders therefrom.
Tasteless Coated Pills. Ointments, levigated by steam power.
Oleates, prepared by double decomposition. The Extra Pale Cod
Liver Oil, and preparations thereof. Soluble Flavouring Essences
and other articles used in the manufacture of Aerated Waters.
786 Grimshaw Brothers, Canal Chemical Works, Clayton,
Manchester.
Solid and Liquid Chloride of Zinc, Sulphate, Oxide, and Sulphide
of Zinc, and other Salts of Zinc used in Manufactures, Pharmacy,
and Medicine.
Materials used in Sizing, Bleaching, and Finishing of
176
SECTION III.
Cotton Warps and Piece Goods. Samples illustrating patent process
for the removal of the coating of zinc from galvanized scrap iron,
and the utilisation of the iron and the zinc. Samples illustrating
the removal of scale from steam boilers. Recovered indiarubber
native indiarubber of various kinds. Chemicals, Pigments, and,
Drugs used in the manufacture of indiarubber.
787 Thomas Chkisty & Co., 25, Lime-street, London, E.C.
A collection of Raw and Manufactured Drugs and their prepara-
tions, Menthol Cones, Myocom Fly Gum, Fibres, Guttas, Rubbers,
Tanning Barks, Ac.
788 E. Merck, Darmstadt, Germany.
Fine Chemicals.
790 Dr. Theodor Schuchardt, Chemical Works, Goerlitz,
Germany.
Chemical Compounds for scientific, medical, and toxological use.
250 compounds.
791 Mottershead & Co., 7, Exchange -street, and 10,
Half-moon-street, Manchester.
Fine Chemicals for use in medicine and the arts, and in practical
and experimental chemistry.
792 Howards & Sons, City Mills, Stratford, E.
Quinine Salts. Pharmaceutical and other chemicals,
793 Edward Charles Cortis Stanford, Glenwood,
Dalnuir, Dumbartonshire.
Products from Seaweed.
794 Kay Brothers, 7, 9, and 13, Lower Hillgate ; laboratory
and works, St. Petersgate, Stockport.
Simple and Compound Essences, Extracts, Lozenges and Pills
of Linseed, &c. Sapo Lini — Linseed Soap. Sea Water made
Potable. Fine Chemical Crystals, Scales, Ac. Absorbent and Anti-
septic Cotton Wools, viz.. Pure Absorbent, Carbolised, Sublimated,
Salicylicated, lodoformed, Ac. Glass Valve Tubes (Kay’s patent), for
Infimts’ Feeding Bottles, Ac. Chemical Disinfectant. Lava, a
fusible cement for stone and iron work. Coaguline, a transparent
cement for broken articles. Perfumes — Osborne Bouquet, Bramhall
Bouquet, English Lavender Water, Ac. Syrups — Coffee. Medicinal
Extracts and Essences of Ginger, Peppermint, Sarsaparilla, Taraxacum
or Dandelion, and Ergot. Medicinal Oils — Cod Liver (Duncan’s and
Norwegian), Castor, Linseed, Cottonseed, Mustardseed, Sweet
Almond, Olive, Sperm, Lard.
r
CHEMICAL AND ALLIED INDUSTRIES.
177
GROUP VII.— DYES AND COLOURING MATTERS
FROM OTHER SOURCES THAN COAL-TAR.
795 Millward & Cryer, 10, Greenwood-street, Man-
chester.
Indigo. Model of Producing Factory. Seed, Plant, and classi-
fied Samples of Indigo, Specimens of Refined and Extract of Indigo
Patterns of Fabrics dyed with Indigo.
796 E. D. Milnes & Bro., Lumn Mills, Bury, Lancashire,
and 34, Faulkner-street, Manchester.
DyeAvood Extracts, Dyewood Liquors, and other Natural
Colouring Matters used in dyeing and calico printing, as well as the
Dyewoods and other Raw Materials from which they are obtained.
Tannin and Tannic Extracts employed as fixing agents and in the
manufacture of leather, together Avith the Barks, Leaves, Fruits, &c.,
from which they are prepared. Drysalteries, various.
797 Charles Dixon & Co., 86, Bandal-street, Blackburn,
Lancashire.
Baking, Custard, Egg, and Blancmange PoAvders. Starch Gloss,
Borax Dry Soap, Harness Blacking, Cattle Medicines, Bleached Oils
and Colours.
798 Bourgeois Aine, 31, Rue de Caire, Paris; agent,
Alfred Hallam, Post Office, Peel Causeway, Altrincham.
Specialities in fine Colours for designers to calico printers, the
industrial arts, and for floAvers, in tubes, flakes, powder, batons, and
moist. Drawing Materials, Mathematical Instruments, and Designers’
Requisites.
GROUP VIII.— METALLURGY.
799 Abram Coal Co., Bickershaw, Wigan; and 64, The
Albany, Liverpool.
Specimens of Abram New Boghead Cannel, Selected Cannel
Pickings, Cannel Nuts, Arley House Coal, Arley Gas Coal, Arley
Nuts, Orrel 5ft. Coal, Wigan 5ft. Coal, Wigan 4ft. Coal, Wigan 6ft.
Coal, and Abram Main Coal.
800 Percy C. Gilchrist, 101, Palace Chambers, Bridge-
street, Westminster, S.W.
Steel and Slag made from phosphoric pig-iron, by the Basic or
Thomas-Gilchrist process.
I
178
SECTION III.
801
36,
802
803
804
Cowles Electric Smelting and Aluminium Co.,
Lombard-street, London, E.C.
Sample ingots of the products of the electric smelting furnace
and CoAvles process, and various products thereof in crude and
manufactured forms.
Johnson, Matthey, & Co., Hatton Garden, London.
Platinum Apparatus for concentrating sulphuric acid, and for
laboratory purposes.
James Smith, 39 and 41, Bridge-street, Manchester.
Gold Leaf, in process of manufacture.
Magnesium Metal Co., Patricroft, near Manchester.
Antimony Ore (Oxide). Senarmontite Crystals (Meroxide of
Antimony). Antimony Ore (Stibnite). Antimony Metal. Antimony
Potassium Tartrate (Tartar Emetic). Antimony Sodium Fluoride.
Bismuth Ore. Bismuth Metal Gold Ore (Quartz). Gold.
Magnesium Ore (Magnesium Carbonate). Magnesium Metal.
Magnesium Metal Ingots. Magnesium Metal Filings. Magnesium
Metal Ribbon. Magnesium Metal Wire. ISIercury Ore (Sulphide-
Cinnabar). Mercury. Potassium Metal. Silver Ore. Silver
Cake. Silver (Granulated). Sodium Metal. Sodium Chlorate.
Sodium Hydrate (Caustic Soda). Vanadium Ore. Vanadic Acid.
Vanadiate of Ammonia. The New Incandescent Gas Light.
Antimony Ores, Metal, and Salts. Bismuth Ores and Metal. Gold
Ores and Metal. Magnesium Ore and Metal. Mercury Ore and
Metal. Potassium Metal. Silver Ores and ]\Ietal. Sodium Metal
and Salts. Vanadium Ore and Salts.
805 Joseph Walker Parker & Co., Lead Works, Chester.
Lead Ore. Lead. Products of above, and various manufactures
therefrom.
Platt Brothers & Co., Limited, Hartford Ironworks,
Oldham.
A piece of IMountain Mine Coal. Coke made from Washed
Mountain Mine Coal. A piece of Big Mine Coal, from Moston
Colliery. Machine-made Facing Bricks. Close Fire Bricks, made
from pit shale and clay ground together.
Webster’s Patent Aluminium Crown Metal Co.,
34, St. Mary Axe, London, E.C.
Webster’s Patent Metals and Goods Manufactured from them.
Duncan McKechnie, Metal Works, St. Helens, Lanca-
shire.
Specimens illustrative of the Wet Copper Extraction Process.
Spanish Pyrites, Burnt Pyrites, Purple Ore, Silver Precipitate,
(’opper Precipitate, Ac. Refined Ingot Copper Refined Silver.
Sulphate of Copper. Shot Copper.
806
807
808
I
CHEMICAL AND ALLIED INDUSTRIES. 179
809 TheMostyn Coal and Iron Co., Mostyn, North Wales.
Samples of Spiegeleiseii, Ferromanganese, Silico Spiegel,
Silicious Iron, Ferrochromium. Samples of Manganese.
810 Henry Wiggin & Co., 55, George-street, Parade,
Birmingham.
Specimens of Nickel and Cobalt Ore, and materials exhibiting
the process of manufacture from the native mineral to the finished
spoon and fork, &c. Specimens of Nickel and Cobalt in various forms,
including the Oxides of Cobalt. Specimens of German Silver and
other white metals. Samples of Stamped and Raised Metal. Tubes
for Ship Fittings and Bar Fittings. Specimens of Harness Furniture
and Railway Carriage Fittings in Silveroid, a new white metal.
German Silver Wires, &c. Cast Anodes of Nickel and Cobalt for
nickel and cobalt plating. Patent wrought Anodes of Nickel and
Cobalt and Nickel and Cobalt Salts.
I
811 West Cumberland Iron and Steel Co., Limited, j
Workington, Cumberland.
Materials used and products obtained in the Manufacture of
Bessemer Pig Iron, Spiegeleisen, Steel Rails, Plates, and Steel
Castings.
812 The College of Agriculture, Downton, near Salisbury.
A Chart exhibiting the elfects of Basic Cinder used as a fertiliser.
Specimens of Basic Cinder (a) before disintegration. Specimens of
Cinder {h) after disintegration. Specimens of the Basic Lining of
Bessemer Converters (Thomas - Gilchrist process). Specimens of
Superphosphate of Lime, manufactured from basic cinder. Specimen
of Precipitated Phosphate of Lime, manufactured from basic cinder.
Specimens of Steel (Thomas - Gilchrist process), from the North-
Eastern Steel Works.
813 The Astley and Tyldesley Coal and Salt Co.,
Limited, Tyldesley, near Manchester, and Castlefield,
Liverpool-read, Manchester.
Sample Blocks of Astley Best House Coal, Hartley House
and Gas Coal, Six-Feet Rams Steam Coal, and Great Seven-Feet
Bakers’ Coal.
GROUP IX.— ALKALIS, ACIDS AND SALTS.
814 John Riley and Sons, Hapton Chemical Works, near
Accrington.
Chemicals for Bleachers, Finishers, Dyers, and Calico Printers.
SECTION III,
John Thom, Birkacre, Chorley, Lancashire.
Process of making Carbonate of Soda.
Bell Brothers, Limited, Middlesbrough.
Samples illustrating the salt deposits and industry of the Tees,
and the Schloesing Ammonia-Soda process. Samples illustrating the
manufactuteof pig iron at tlie Clarence Iron Works, near Middlcsbrougli.
Samples illustrating tlie manufacture of Barium on the Tyne.
816 Brunner, Mond and Co. Limited, North wich,
Cheshire.
Carbonate of Soda (Pure Alkali, Bleachers’ Ash, and other
qualities), Soda Crystals, Sesqui-Carbonate of Soda, Bicarbonate of
Soda, Caustic Soda, and Bleaching Powder.
817 WiGG Brothers and Steele, Old Quay, Runcorn.
Vitriol, Salt Cake, Acids, Copper, Pearl Hardening, Bleaching
Powder, Paints, with raw materials from which they are manufactured.
818 Tennants & Co., 49, Faulkner -street, Manchester;
works. Mill Street, Clayton, Manchester.
Oil of Vitriol. Rectified and Brown Muriatic Acid. Nitric
Acid. Epsom Salts. Glaubers Salts. Copperas. Sulphate of
Copper. Stannate Soda. 40oz. Metallic Tin. Tin Crystals and
Solutions. Solid Chloride Zinc. Sulphate of Zinc. Nitrate of Iron.
Chloride of Manganese. Bisulphites of Soda and Lime. Bichromates
of Potash and Soda. Red and Yellow Prussiate of Potash. Nitrate
of Copper Crystals.
819 Jok C. Gamble and Son, Gerard’s Bridge Chemical
Works, St. Helens.
Samples showing the various stages in the process of manufacture
of — Soda Ash, “ purified,” Chlorate of Potash ; Caustic Soda Ash,
Chlorate of Soda ; Caustic Soda Cream, Chlorate of Baryta; Bleaching
Powder, Chlorate of Strontia; Sulphide of Sodium, and other chlorates.
820 James Muspratt k Sons, Liverpool and Widnes.
Soda Ash, Caustic Soda, White Sulphur. Chlorate of Potash,
Chloride of Magnesium, Bleaching Powder, Rectified Vitriol, Brown
Vitriol, Sulphide of Barium, Chloride of Barium, Sulphide of Zinc,
Blanc Fixe, Manganate of Soda, Saltcake 97°, Muriatic Acid, Chlorate
of Soda, Hydrate of Baryta Magnesia.
815 Gaskell, Deacon and Co., Widnes.
Samples of the following Chemicals : Bicarbonate of Soda,
Caustic Soda, Refined Alkali, Soda Ash, Crystal Carbonate, Bleaching
Powder, Chloride of Calcium, and Soda Crystals (Washing Soda).
CHEMICAL AND ALLIED INDUSTRIES.
181
823 J. M. Collett & Co., High Orchard Works, Gloucester.
Specimens of their Pure Bisulphite of Lime, Bisulphite of Soda,
Bisulphite of Potash, and Bisulphite of Magnesia, together with
Sulphites of Lime, Potash, Soda, Sulphurous Acid, and their Universal
Preservative. Also Isinglass from Russia, Siberia, Hudson Bay,
Brazil, West Indies, Penang, Bombay, Kurrachee, China and Manilla.
824 C. B. CuLLERNE & Co. ; office, 36, Cobden-street ; Crown
Works, Napier-street, Liverpool.
Isinglass, Finings, Bisulphite of Lime, Sulphurous Acid, &c.
825 A. G. Kurtz & Go., Sutton Alkali Works, St. Helens,
Lancashire.
Soda Ash. Caustic Soda. Chlorate of Potash. Bleaching
Powder. Soda Crystals (Washing Soda).
826 John Howarth Padgett, Brookdale Salt Works, North-
wich, Cheshire.
Salts of various qualities.
827 R. & N. Pott, 22, Southwark Bridge-road, London, S.E.
Vinegar, Materials. Models, showing old and new processes of
acetification.
828 Anthony K. Kaye & Son, Mold Green Chemical Works,
Huddersheld.
Various Chemical Products. Aniline Dyes. One-dip Dyes
(Fast). Indigo, and Indigo Products. Dye woods, and Dyewood
Extracts ; and general Drysalteries.
829 Peter Spence & Sons, Manchester Alum Works, Man-
chester ; Goole Alum Works, Goole ; Peter Spence
& Co., Nechells Park Chemical Works, Birmingham.
Colossal Crystal of Alum (quality as used by makers of finest
papers, dyers, calico printers, tanners, pottery colour manufacturers,
cement makers, &c., &c.). Alum of extreme purity, for Turkey
red dyeing (Spence’s Turkey Red). Ground. Alum, as used
in dyeing, calico printing, &c., &c. Spence’s Patent Sulphate of
Alumina, purest quality, for making red liquor for dyers, sizing-
paper, &c., &c. Spence’s Patent AluminofeiTic, for sizing ordinary
papers, purifying waters for towns and manufactories, making cloth
incombustible, Ac., &c. Spence’s Patent Alfersil, for Purifying-
Sewage and other refuse waters, by Spence’s Patent. Sulphuric
Acid. Hydrochloric Acid. Sulphate of Potash. Sulphate of
Ammonia. Alum Octahedra, showing typical form of alum crystal.
Spence’s International Hydrometer : a standard measurer both of the
strength and the specific gravity of solutions and other liquids.
The Eueeka Salt Manufacturing Co., Limited;
works, NortliM^ich, Cheshire ; offices, 33, Tower
Buildings West, Liverpool.
Rock Salt. Natural Brine, and Manuft\ctured Salt in natural
crystals of various kinds.
SECTION III
182
830 The Widnes Alkali Co., Limited, Wiclnes, Lancashire,
and 25, Water-street, Liverpool.
White Caustic Sodci, Bleaching Powder (Chloride of Lime),
Saltcake (Suphate of Soda), Chlorate of Potash, crystallised and
powdered. Manganate of Soda, Permanganate of Soda.
831 The Greenbank Alkali Works Co., Limited, St.
Helens, Lancashire.
Pure Chemicals, Double Refined Caustic Soda, Double Refined
Caustic Soda, powdered (a specialty for Bleachers, Dyei's, &c., and for
making pure Hard Soap). Pure Caustic Potash ^a specialty for Woollen
Manufacturers, for making pure Potash Soaps). Refined Pearl
Ashes, Pure Chlorate of Potash, crystals and powder. Chloride of
Lime, or Bleaching Powder, of extra strength. Pure Red Oxide of
Iron. Pure Red Oxide Paint.
832 R; & J. Garroway, Netherfield Chemical Works,
Glasgow.
Model of Works. Roll Sulphur. Double Vitriol. Concentrated
Vitriol. Unconcentrated Vitriol. Pyrites Vitriol. Engravers’ Nitric
Acid. Aqua Fortis. Braziers’ Aqua Fortis. Marine Acid. Sulphiu’ous
Acid. Bisulphate of Lime. Caustic Soda. Soda Ash. Salt Cake. Nitre
Cake. Oxalic Acid. Nitrate of Iron. Sulpho-Nitrate of Iron.
Nitrate of Copper. Crystals of Tin. Oxy-muriate of Tin. Double
Muriate of Tin. Single Muriate of Tin. Pink Salts. Lac Spirits.
Alizarine Stannate. Solid Stannate of Soda. Glauber Salts. Epsom
Salts. Borax. Boracic Acid. Acetic Acid. Acetate of Lime. Red
Liquor. Charcoal. Muriate of Iron. Muriate of Zinc. Feathered
Refined Tin, Ac., Ac. Also Patent Process for Making Sulphuric Acid.
833 W. G. PuRSELL & Co., 13, Bernard-street, and 40,
Constitution-street, Leith.
Borax in a natural, simple, and compound condition, suitable for
various manufacturing, chemical, medical and domestic purposes.
Refined Boracic Acid, and a specially-prepared powder for the preser-
vation of fresh fish and other food substances.
834 The Trustees of the late James Buckley, Copperas
Manufacturers, 108, Higher Ardwick, Manchester.
Crystals of Green Copperas (Sulphate of Iron).
835 H. D. PocHiN & Co., Limited, Quay-street, Salford.
Materials for Paper Makers and Calico Printers.
GROUP X .— FATS, OILS, AND SOAPS.
838 Joseph Ceosfielh & Sons, Warrington.
Toilet and Household Soaps.
839 N. Kilvert & Sons, Mark-lane, Manchester.
Packages of Lard, patent grease-proof boxes, and other
specialities. Hermetically sealed tins.
840 Henry Shaw & Co., Chemical Manufacturers, Dukinfielcl,
near Manchester.
Soaps, Blues, and Ultramarines.
841 David Thom & Co., Whit-lane Works, Pendleton.
Soap and small Hand-Stamping Machine.
842 Joshua Margerison & Co., White Windsor Soap Works,
Preston.
Soap Castle. Bust of Queen Victoria. Bust of Prince Albert.
Bust of Late President Lincoln, United States of America. Bust of
late President Garfield, United States of America. All made from
Margeri son’s White Windsor Soap. Samples of various Soaps.
843 John Higson, 72, Victoria-street, Blackburn.
Wart Soap.
844 William Brown, Victoria Soap Co., Limited, 47, Oldham-
road, Manchester.
Soaps for silk throwing, spinning and dyeing, cotton sizing and
feeding ; also prepared soap for cops. Fancy Soaps Fulling
and Scouring Soaps. Detergents. Paint Killer. Neutral Carriage
Paste. Boiler Compound Wheel Greases.
845 T. B. Rowe & Co., Thames Soap Works, Brentford,
London.
White Oil Soap. Refined Curd Soap Bengal Yellow Soap.
Brown Oil Soap, Brentford Mottled Soap.
846 James Alexander & Co., 18, Paradise-street, Lambeth,
London.
Savon Hamamelis Virginica, or Hazel Soap,
and other Soaps.
The Exhibition
847 Gray, Smith, and Bennitt, Rockingham Soap and
Starch Works, Wath-upon-Dearne. Yorkshire.
Household Soaps, Toilet Soaps, Soft Soaps, Dry Soap, Milling
and Scouring Soaps. Starch. Chemicals and T:dlows used in the
manufacture of the same.
5 848 Chiswick Soap Co., Chiswick, Middlesex. J
^ n
^ Soft Soaps. Oils and Potashes from whicli thev are made. "
^ '' f*
850 J. C. Paton & Son, 5, Chatham-street, Piccadilly,
Manchester.
851 Geldart & Co., Eathbone-road, Old Swan, Liverpool.
Soft Soap. Blacking.
852 Eoy & Co., 5, Brown-street, Red Bank, Manchester.
853 Bagnall & Co., Red Bank Oil Works, and 22, Bull’s
Head Chambers, City.
Oils and Greases.
854 Smith and Forrest, Holt Town, Manchester.
Rosin, Mineral Shale, Petroleum, and Coal Tar.
855 Robert Brown & Co., 4, Newton-street, Manchester.
Bar and Soft Soaps for silk, cotton, and wool. Peifiimed
Eyebright Soaps. Detergent, Paint Solvent, and Brown’s Boiler
Compound.
856 The Health Soap Co., Soap Manufacturers, Bootle,
Liverpool.
Health Soap, and process of manufacture.
857 Frederick Round, Chemist, 10, London -street, Southport.
858 David Shaw & Co.; works, Clayton, near Manchester;
offices, 35, Market-street, Manchester.
Wool, Cloth, and Oleine Oils. Stearine Tallow Greases. Hot-
neck, Water, and Cog Wheel. Spindle, Loom, Cylinder, and Engine
Oils. Animal, Vegetable, and Fish Oils. Chemical Manures. Bone
Sizes and Glues.
859 A. B. Fleming & Co., Limited, Caroline Park, Edin-
burgh ; and 67, Piccadilly, Manchester.
Patent Solidified Oil and Lubricatous Spindle. Loom and Engine
Oils. Cylinder and Valve Oil. Colliery Greases. New Mineral
fibre, Agalite, rock and ground.
CHEMICAL AND ALLIED INDUSTRIES.
185
860 John Sandeman, Ruchill Oil Works, Maryhill, Glasgow.
Crude Rosin Oils. Refined Rosin Oils. Drying or Siccative
Rosin Oil. Rosin Spirit. Rosin Pitch. Mineral Greases.
861 Geo. and Geo. W. Skelton, 15, Quay-street, Manchester.
Animal, Vegetable, and Mineral Lubricating Oils, and Tallows.
862 George Fairclough, Green Lane Oil Works, Princess-
street, Manchester.
Oils.
863 Senior and Brooks, Limited, Spring Lane Oil and Soap
Works, Badcliffe ; and Back Pool Fold, Cross-street,
Manchester.
Loom, Spindle, Engine, Cylinder, Shafting, and Machinery Oils.
' Fancy Toilet Soaps. Transparent Glycerine Soap.
864 CoLLEDGE Boy & Co., 5, Brown-street and 27, Boger-
street. Bed Bank, Manchester.
Lubricating Oils and Tallow Greases, and Sizing Tallow and
Wax.
865 Broadbent & Son, India Buildings, 14, Cross-street,
Manchester.
Engelbert’s Lubricant.
866 J. Veitch Wilson, Halliday, & Co., Queen-street,
Bradford, Manchester.
Specimens of materials used in the preparation of Lubricating
Oils. Samples of finished Lubricating Oils. Instruments and
Apparatus used in testing lubricants.
867 Edwin Washington Wollaston, 12, Dutton-street,
Manchester.
Samples of Lubricating and Burning Oils.
868 William H. Samuel & Co., 62, Dale-street, Liverpool;
and Guardian Buildings, Cross-street, Manchester ;
works, 13, 15, and 17, Ford-street, Liverpool.
Spindle, Cylinder, Engine, and Axle Oils and Greases.
869 Joseph Kershaw k Co., Hollinwood, near Manchester.
Samples of Non-Conducting Composition, Asbestos Coating, Hair
Felt, Asphalte Felt, Asbestos Removable Coating, Wheel and
Locomotive Greases, Wire Rope Grease, Engine and Bolton Polishes,
Banding Composition, Rope Driving Composition, Red, Black and
other coloured Varnishes. Detergent Composition, Soft Soap, White
Soft Soap, Printers’ and Bleachers’ Soap, Fullen Millers’ and
Domestic Soaps (various).
186
SECTION TIT.
870 James Light & Son, 11 , Runiford-street, Liverpool.
Lubricating Oils, Burning Oils, Tallows, Greases, Sizing Flours,
Wool, Engine and Shafting Oils.
871 Robert Oliver & Co., Sharp-street Oil Works, Rochdale-
road, Manchester.
Oils and Tallows.
872 Wm. Gossage & Sons; works, Widnes, Lancashire.
Illustration of the History, Chemistry, and Manufacture of
ordinary English Soaps. The Chemical Substances employed in soap-
making in former times and as now used. Palm Plant, with fruit
from which palm oil, as imported from Africa, is made. Raw
Palm Oil as imported. Cocoa Nuts, in fibre and without. Coprah,
the dried fleshy part of the cocoa nut, from which cocoa-nut oil is
expressed. Palm Nuts and Palm Kernels from which palm-kernel
oil is made. Cotton Seeds from Egypt, from which cotton oil is
produced. Kelp Weed. Kelp Salts, as used by soap makers before
the invention of Le Blanc revolutionised the soda manufacture.
Soda Ash. Caustic Soda and Soda Crystals. Spent Lye, waste
liquor from soap making, the largest source of glycerine. Crude
Glycerine. Pure Glycerine, fit for dynamite making. Nitro-
glycerine and cases (empty) in which dynamite is usually packed.
Silicates of Soda and Potash, both solid and liquid. The principal
use for silicate of soda (solution) is for soap manufacture. It is also
used largely in the manufacture of artificial stone, and in calico
printing. The calico with which this Court is draped has been
printed wdth silicate of soda.
873 Lever Bros., Sunlight Soap Works, Warrington.
Sunlight Soap, with process of stamping the tablets. Practical
description by actual illustrations of the methods of using the soap.
A complete model to scale, in fibrous plaster, of the Sunlight Soap
Works.
GROUP XL— TANNING.
874 William Walker & Sons, Rose Hill and Bark-street
Tanneries, Bolton.
Curried English Strap Butts, dressed whole and in halves. Eng-
lish Shoe and Clog Butts. English Shoidders and Bellies.
875 Henry Parkinson & Co., Tanners, Latchford, near
Warrington.
An Oak Bark and Valonia Leather, specially tanned for all liard
wear-resisting purposes, such as sole, bucket, hydraidic, and other
requirements.
CHEMICAL AND ALLIED INDUSTRIES.
187
876 Gridley & Co., Bishopsgate Avenue, London.
Russian Isinglass, as taken from the sturgeon. Brazil Isinglass
in similar stages. Isinglass of every description, in crude state, from
Penang, Bombay, Hudson Bay, West Indies, Saigon, Singapore, and
China ; also the same kinds in their manufactured condition.
877 Thomas R. B. Bindley & Son, Smethwick, near
Birmingham.
Sample Cakes of Gelatines and Glues. Samples of Size and Grease.
Specimens of Articles of different trades in which these goods are
consumed. Raw materials from which manuhictured, and the refuse.
878 James Taylor & Sons, 27, 29, and 31, Union Square,
Bury, Lancashire.
Shoe, Clog, and Kip Butts. Sole Bends, English and Foreign.
Harness Backs, Black and Brown. Welt Shoulders. Insole Shoulders,
Black Bellies and Shoulders. Tanning Extracts : Clarified Oak,
Myrabolam, Sumac, Divi-Divi, Valonia, Larch. Tanning Material :
Mp’obolams, Sumac, Divi, and Valonia.
GROUP XII.— INDIARUBBER, GUTTA PERCHA, &c,
879 David Moseley & Sons, Chapel Field Works, Ardwick,
Manchester; warehouses, 2, 4, and 6, New Brown-street,
Manchester ; 14, Aldermanbury Avenue, London, E.C. ;
57, Miller-street, Glasgow ; 20, Bue des Marais, Paris ;
14, Place Sainte Gudule, Brussels.
Indiarubber for mechanical purposes : Washers, Sheet, Valves,
Railway Buffers, Steam Packing, Ball Valves, Bearing Springs, Deckle
Straps for Paper Machines. Door Mats. Stair Treads, &c. India-
rubber Tubing for chemical purposes. India rubber Delivery and
Suction Hose. Anchor Linen Hose for fire brigades. Simplex Cotton
Belt. Vulcanite and Ebonite for electrical and chemical purposes.
Patent Coruscus Waterproof Garments. Waterproof Garments of all
kinds. Lome Tobacco Pouches. The New Rex Tennis Balls.
880 J. Mandleberg & Co., Albion Rubber Works, Pendleton,
Manchester; 69, High-street, Manchester; 18, St.
Paul’s Church Yard, London, E.C. ; 49, Jamaica-street,
Glasgow; 18, Fleet-street, Dublin. -
Waterproof Clothing, in various styles and materials. Venti-
lated Waterproof Clothing. Albion and Embossed Proofing. Water-
proof Ponchos and General Indiarubber Manufactures.
188
SECTION ITT.
881 Broadhurst & Co., Bradford, Manchester.
Indiarubber for mechanical and engineering purposes. Water-
proof Garments and Air-proof Goods.
882 The Salford and Irwell Bubber Co., Limited,
liO, Fenchurch-street, London, E.C. ; Mwks, Mill-
street, Ordsall-lane, Salford.
Indiarubber Manufactures.
883 William Currie & Co., Caledonian Bubber Works,
Edinburgh.
Indiarubber Manufactures for mechanical purposes. 'Waterproof
Cloths in the piece. "Waterproof Clothing. Anglers and Sportsmen’s
Requisites, Coachbuilders’ Furnishings, Door Mats, Tennis Shoe
Soles, Golf Balls, Ac.
884 Cooper, Box & Co., 7, Love-lane, Wood-street, London,
E.C.
The Talethes AVaterproof Coats and other Waterproof Garments.
Ladies’ Waterproof Cloaks ; Waterproof Driving Aprons ; AVaterproof
Leggings, &c.
885 Chas. Macintosh & Co., Cambridge-street, Manchester.
Indiarubber, raw and in process of manufacture. Solid Rubber
Blocks and Cut Sheet. Sheets. A^alves, (Cylinders, AA^ashers, Buffers,
Belting, Hose Pipe, Alats and Floorcloth. Elastic Thread, Inflated
Indiarubber Boat, AAbuerproof Textures and Garments, Airproof
Goods, Ambulance and Life-saving Alattresses, Surgical Goods, Elastic
Bauds, Tennis and Playing Balls.
887 Bilsland & Co., 99, Princess-street, Edinburgh.
AVaterproof Driving, Hunting, and Shooting Coats. Fishing
Trousers, Stockings, Boots, and Bags. Air and AA^ater Cushions.
Carriage Aprons and Mats. Sponging Baths, Cartridge and Game
Bags, Hot AVater Bottles, Ladies’ Silk and other AA^aterproofs, Garden
Hose, Horse-frog Pads, Decoy Ducks, Lawn Tennis Shoes, Cart
Covers, Horse Loin Covers, Ac.
888 IsiDOR Frankenburg, Greengate Bubber and Leather
Works, Salford, Manchester.
Raw Rubber, AA’’aterproof Cloth Garments and Hugs, Tennis
and Sporting Shoes, Leggings, Laces, and sundry AVaterproof and
Leather Goods.
889 Edavard Watson, 34, Soutli Back, Canongate, Edin-.
burgh.
Indiarubber and Xylonite Articles. Bainis, Combs.
CHEMICAL AND ALLIED INDUSTRIES.
189
890 The Ancoats Vale Rubber Co., Limited, Palmerston-
street, Ancoats, Manchester.
Vulcanised Indiarubber Thread, Fine-cut Sheet, Thin Spread
Sheet, Single and Double Texture Waterproof Garments, Carriage
Rugs and Mats, Leggings, Airproof Goods, Card Cloths, Printers’ and
Lithographic Blankets, Valves, Sheet and Washers for mechanical
purposes, Indiarubber Driving Belts, Suction and Delivery Hose Pipes,
Gas Tubing. Lawn Tennis and other Playing Balls, Domestic,
Surgical, and other Indiarubber articles.
891 The Laverine Chemical Co. ; works. Abbey Hey,
Gorton; town address, 29, Princess-street, Manchester.
Sea Foam, or light white Artificial Indiarubber. Amber, or
hard yellow Artificial Indiarubber. Nigrum Elasticum, or hard black
Artificial Indiarubber. Castor, or hard grey Artificial Indiarubber.
Powdered white Artificial Indiarubber. Powdered yellow Artificial
Indiarubber. Powdered black Artificial Indiarubber. »
GROUP XIII — BUILDING MATERIALS.
892 Kneeshaw, Lupton &Co., 41, Old Hall-street, Liverpool.
Samples from Llysfaen Quarries. Lime, Limestone, Crushed
Chippings and Riddlings, and Limestone Dust. Samples from Port
Nant Granite Quarries, near Pwllheli, North Wales. Granite
Paving Sets, Breakers, Macadam and Chippings.
893 Thurstonland Brick and Stone Co., Limited, B rockboles,
near Huddersfield.
Dark Red Facing Bricks. Light Red Facing Bricks. Imperish-
able Engineering Bricks. Ornamental Bricks. Machine-dressed,
Hard Blue, York Stone, consisting of moulded and plain steps,
copings, palisading, stones, flags, &c.
894 Geo. King Harrison, The Lye Fire-clay and Brick
Works, Stourbridge.
Fire-bricks (burnt and unburnt). Retorts (burnt). Fire-clay, in
natural state as raised. Specimens of same after having been
subjected to intense heat.
895 The Croft Granite, Brick, and Concrete Co., Croft,
near Leicester.
Articles for Building, Paving, and Decorating in Croft
Adamant. String courses. Panels, Medallions, and other Ornamental
mouldings. Paving Slabs, plain and grooved.
190
SECTION III.
896 Thomas Lawrence k Son, Bracknell, Berkshire.
Gauged and Carved Red Brickwork, in the shape of a niche
executed with the T. L. B. rubbing bricks, standing on a base built
with red pressed facing bricks.
897 William Mellor, Gorton Brook Pottery, Ardwick,
Manchester.
Chemical Stoneware Pottery, used in condensing, evaporating,
collecting, crystallising, or mixing of cliemicals, and consisting of
receivers, taps, pipes, mugs, jugs, funnels, test trials, and dishes.
898 Edward Brooke k Sons^ Fieldhouse Fireclay Works,
Huddersfield.
Silica Fire Bricks. Fireclay Bricks. Wliite and Coloured
Glazed Bricks. White and Coloured Glazed Sinks. Salt Glazed
Earthenware Cisterns. Glass Furnace Blocks. Glass Tank Boats.
Glass Tank Syphons. Gas Retorts. Tuyeres.
899 Otto Trechmann, West Hartlepool.
Model of Dietzsch’s Patent Kiln for the continuous burning of
cement, limestone, and other materials. Explanatory Drawing of
the same. Apparatus for Testing the Tensile Strength, Soundness,
Fineness, Setting Time, Ac. of Cement. Calcimeter for estimating
the amount of Carbonate of Lime in the Slurry. Sundry Sample
Specimens of Chalk, Clay, Sluny, Clinker, Portland and other Cements.
Briquettes and Standard Sand for testing. Set Cement and Concretes,
illustrating the manufacture, testing, and application of Cement.
900 The Great Bocks Lime and Stone Co., Dove Holes,
near Stockport ; works, Peak Forest, Buxton.
Sample of Best Lime. Ordinary Raw Lump Limestone. Crushed
Limestone for chemical and other purposes.
901 T. C. Brown-Westhead, Moore k Co., Cauldon Place,
Staffordshire Potteries.
Specimens of Materials used in the manufacture of China and
various kinds of Earthenware.
902 Doulton k Co., 17, Deansgate, Manchester; and Lam-
beth Pottery, London.
Stoneware Drain Pipes, Self-Adjusting Joint and Composite
Joint Drain Pipes of Lambeth, Rowley Regis, and St. Helens manu-
facture. Gullie’s Interceptors. Patent Channels. Doulton Peto
Fireproof Flooring. Patent Silicon Tread. Vitrified Stoneware
Sinks. Blue Facing, Paving, and Coping Bricks. Red and Buff
Terra Cotta. Lavatories. Slop Sinks. Water Waste Preventoi*s.
Double Valve Syphon Waste Preventors. Drop by Drop Flushing
Syphons for main and branch drains. Flushing Tanks. Grease
M
Interceptors, Lavatory Valves, Stop Cocks, &c. Glazed Ware. Slow
Combustion Grates and Mantels ; also Radiating Open Tile Stoves for
halls, &c.
903 Sneyd Colliery and Brickworks Co. Limited, Burslem,
Staffordshire.
White and Coloured Enamelled Glazed Bricks, Fire Bricks, and
Fire Clay Goods.
904 Joseph Cliff & Sons, Wortley, near Leeds.
Imperial Porcelain Bath and fittings. Roman Bath, with
ornamental rolled top panels. Imperial Slop Sinks, Washing Tul)s,
Kitchen Sinks, &c. White, Coloured, and Ornamental Glazed Bricks,
Glazed Brownware Bricks for staircases. Dados to Schools, Szc.
Faience Panels, Stringcourses, Fenders, &c. Architectural TeiTa
Cotta. Hanging Tiles. White and coloured Channel Bends and
Traps for manholes. Patent Traps, Lavatories, Plug Basins, &c.
905 The Troutbeck Park (Westmoreland) Green Slate
Co., Limited, Windermere
Light and Dark Sea-green Roofing Slates.
906 The iEsTHETic Asphalte Co., Wellington-terrace,
Todmorden ; Virginia-street, Southport ; Hulme
Hall-road, Manchester.
Samples of Stansfield’s Patent Asphalte for carriage drives,
garden paths, or promenades. Also of Stansfield’s Patent Laminated
Waterproof Asphalte, for covering arches, bridges, mill and other
roofs, &c., for carrying or throwing off water.
907 Brundrit & Co., Buncorn, Cheshire.
Specimens of Architectural Work in Runcorn Building Stone.
Also, Samples of Paving Sets, Crossings, &c., for road purposes.
908
909
WiLLESDEN Paper Works (The Patent Waterproof
Paper and Canvas Co., Limited), Willesden Junction,
London, N.W.
Ventilating Shaft of Willesden 4-ply Paper, for mining, and
other purposes. Awning, illustrating uses of Willesden Canvas.
Tank made of Willesden 4-ply Paper, holding water. Rolls of
Willesden Roofing, Willesden Paper, Willesden Rotproof Canvas, and
Willesden Rotproof Scrim.
Casebourne & Co., Limited, West Hartlepool.
Portland Cement, from the raw material to its finished state.
Concrete Work. Test Bars. Faijas Cement Testing Machine.
Scheibler’s Apparatus for the Accurate Quantitative Estimate for
Carbonate of Lime. Arnold’s Patent Cement Moulder. Sieves and
Gauge Glasses for ascertaining fineness of Cement.
192
SPXTION HI.
f^Wi
GROUP XIV.— SUGAR, GUMS, STARCHES, c.
910 Thomas Critchley, 10, King William-street, Blackburn.
Starch Gloss.
‘Jll Tpiew and Stiebel, 65, Sackville-street, Manchester.
Shellac and Gums.
1)12 E. J. Scott, 169, Preston-road, Blackburn.
Potato Products. Farina. Pearl Farina. Potato Piarley. Dextrine,
or British Gum, white, j’ellow, and darker shades. Glucose or Grape
Sugar, solid, chips, liquid. Crystallised Potato Sugar, Virine.
Potato Spirit, various qualities, both refined and unrefined. Products
of the Sago Palm. Section and Photo, of the Sago Palm. Raw
Sago. Sago in various stag’es of manufacture. Sago Flour, Sarawack,
Sago Flour, Borneo. Small, Medium, and Large Pearl Sago.
Tapioca. Tapioca Roots or Bulbs. Tapioca Flour. Tapioca Small
Flake. Arrowroot Indian Corn Starch. Rice Starcli. Wheat
Starch. Sizing Flours. Muciline. Lancashire Size. Various
Prepared Sizes. Raw materials used in the Preparation of Size.
Chloride of Magnesium (prime white and English). Chloride of Zinc,
solid and liquid. Chloride of Calcium, solid and liquid. Epsom and
Glauber’s Salts. Prepared Sizing Wax. Storey’s Warp Softnei's.
Emolline. China Clay, various qualities. French Chalk. Barytes.
913 H. L. Lilley & Co., Albert Works, Queen ’s-road,
Manchester.
Rice, Wheat, Maize, and Potatoe Starches. Crystalised, Granu-
lated, and Powdered Rice (or Cold Water) Starch. Specimen Cubes
of Starch, showing process of crystalisation. Com Flour. British
Gums.
913a Henry Tate k Sons, 15, Exchange Buildings, Liverpool;
and 21, Mincing Lane, London.
Samples of Crystal Sugars. Cut Loaf Sugar.
914 The Sankey Sugar Co., Earlestown, Lancashire.
Refined Syrup and Black Treacle. Raw Cane Sugars. Samples
from the different processes Raw Cane Sugars pass through in
Refining. Photogi’aphs of Acarus Sacchari, or Sugar Mite.
915 Stiff k Co., Bedcliff-street, Bristol.
Starch and other Products from Rice.
916
GROUP XV.— MISCELLANEOUS.
Wrexham Lager Beer Co., Limited; 14,
The
Brown-street, Manchester ;
brewery, W rexham.
Lager Beer.
CHEMICAL AND ALLIED INDUSTRIES.
193
917 WiLCOCK & Co., Burmantofts, Leeds.
Constructional Faience Fountain.
918 John Johnson & Co., St. Anne’s Works, Liverpool.
Plumbago, or Graphite, commonly known as Black Lead,
specimens of various qualities and kinds from different parts of the
world. Knife-polishing Powder. Laundry Blues, manufactured
from the ultramarine of commerce, in various forms,
for laundry purposes.
Indigo Blues
919 Bryant and May, Limited, Fairfield Works, Bow,
London, E.
Specimens of Patent Safety Matches, Wax Vestas, Wax Tapers
for gas lighting ; Tiger, Ruby, Pearl, Runaway, Elephant, Victoria,
and other Household Matches.
919a Jewsbury and Brown, 113, Market-street, and 44,
Downing-street, Manchester.
Soda Water, Seltzer Water, Potash Water, Lithia Water, Lithia
and Potash Water, Simple Aerated Water, Lemonade, Ginger Ale,
Quinine Tonic Water, Aerated Ginger Beer, Champagne Cider,
Horehound Beer, in bottles, half-bottles, and syphons. Materials
used in the manufacture of mineral waters and aerated beverages.
Specimens of Pure English Tin Pipe. Jewsbury & Brown’s Oriental
Tooth Paste.
920 Frederick King & Co., Limited, 26, Waring-street,
Belfast, and 6, Bishopsgate Avenue, London.
Edwards’ Preserved Potato. A granulated Preparation of the
Fresh Potato. Edwards’ Desiccated Soup. A dry Preparation of
Vegetables and Extract of Beef. Edwards’ White (Vegetable) Soup.
921 Bratby and Hinchcliffe, Sandford-street, Ancoats,
Manchester; and 146, Minories, London, E.C.
Essential Oils, Soluble Fruit Essences, Fruit Syrups, and Cordials
specially prepared for the mineral water and confectionery trades.
Colourings. Citrochloric Acid, a new agent for acidulating aerated
beverages. Salts for natural mineral waters. Heading for producing
a foam on aerated beverages. Lime Juice.
922 J. Blackwood & Co., 18, Bread-street Hill, London.
Writing and Copying Inks. Sealing Wax. Legend Gum Cement.
194
SECTION ITT.
923 P. Cochran & Co., 32 and 32a, Cable-street, Liverpool.
Writing and Copying Inks. Liquid Gums and Glue. Specimens
of Materials used in Ink Making. Specimens of writing done with
P. Cochran & Co.’s. Inks.
924 A. P. Tomme k Son, 75, Back Piccadilly, Manchester.
Towle’s Chlorodyne. Liquid Chlorodjne. Towle’s Chlorodyne
Lozenges. Towle’s Chlorodyne Jujubes. Thornton’s Toilet Cream.
Amboline. The Thornton Lotion.
925 William Sharratt, Tower Works, Di-oylsden,
Manchester.
Carbolic Acid. Carbolic Disinfecting Pow’der. Carbolic Soaps.
Chemical Manures. Non-conducting Composition.
926 Morgan, Lomas, k Co., Crmnpsall Vale Match Works,
Blackley, near Manchester.
Ordinary Household Matches, Ordinary Household Dry Soap,
Hoffman’s Rice Starch.
927 George E. Davis, 301, Great Clowes-street, Manchester.
Working Drawings of Plant for making Liquor Ammonia.
Drawings of Plant for recovering the waste soda from paper mills.
Drawings of Kiln for utilising the waste oxide from gas works.
Working Drawings of Towers for the recovery of nitre in vitriol
w'orks. Working Drawings of new form of Copper Calciner. Working
Drawings of Small Burner for producing sulphurous acid. Case of
Chemicals illustrating products obtained from coal, products obtained
from redonda phosphate and sewage, products obtained from waste
paper mill liquors. Samples illustrating the purification of w’aste
water from factories.
928 Burroughs, Wellcome, k Co., Snow Hill Buildings,
67, Holhorn Viaduct, London, E.C.
Kepler Extract of Malt. Kepler Solution of Cod Liver Oil in
Extract of Malt. Hazeline (a distillate of witch-hazel.) Beef and
Iron Wine. Tablets and Tabloids of Compressed Drugs. Strophan-
tlms (African arrow poison, a heart tonic). Digestive Ferments
(Zymine, Pepsin, &c.). Pure Terebene. Medicine Chests and Cases
fitted with Compressed Drugs, &c.
929 William M. Jowett k Co., 73, and 75, Corporation-
street, Manchester.
New Hygienic Clcansable Filter, with movable lining of earthen-
ware, fitted with compressed charcoal block, and bed of granulated
charcoal. Filters on the loose charcoal and mineral carbon principle,
sealed at top. Filters with charcoal block as filtering medium.
Glass filters for rooms. Pocket Filters. Improved Iron Cleansable
High Pressure or Main Service Filter. Improved Patent
Self-acting Slate Cistern Filter. Earthernware Cistern Filters to
place inside cisterns. Aquariums, Fern Cases, &c. &c.
930 Thomas Eoberts, Broom -lane, Levenshulme, Manchester.
Self Cleansing High-pressure Water Filters.
931 Jacob Barstow, Filter Works, Pontefract, Yorkshire.
Patent Combination Filters. Domestic Filters. Glass Table
Filters. Emigrant, Tourist, and Pocket Filters. Filters for cisterns
and large Supply Filters.
932 Slack and Brownlow, Canning Works, Upper Medlock-
street, Manchester.
Compressed Charcoal Filters for general purposes.
933 SiLicATED Carbon Filter Co., Battersea, London, S.W.
Silicated Carbon Self-aerating Movable Block Filters Self-
aerating Movable Block Glass Table Filters. Main Supply Filters.
Double Cylinder Filters. Silicated Carbon Patent Movable Blocks
on Plates for fitting in reservoirs to filter water supply. Pocket and
Travelling, Ambulance, and Field Service Filters, &c.
934 William Needham Wilkinson & Co., 1, Hopwood
Avenue, Market Place, Manchester.
Water Filters for the pocket. High-pressure Filters for the
tap.
935 Joseph Halliday & Co., Portland Works, Water-street,
Newton, Manchester.
Water Filters, High-pressure and Self-cleansing. Large Filters
Self-cleansing Low-pressure Filters for cisterns, and other filters.
936 George Cheavin, Wide Bangate Filter Works, Boston,
England.
Removable Plate Water Filters, Rapid Water Filters, Self-acting
Cistern Filter, Syphon Filters, Ornamental Filters, Refrigeration
Filters.
937 James and Joseph Clayton, 139, Higher Cambridge-
street, Manchester.
Filtration of Water through natural stone. Cistern Filters.
Portable Pocket Filtei-s, &c. All cut from blocks of natural stone
and with or without the use of charcoal.
938 Liebig’s Extract of Meat Co., Limited, 9, Fenchurch
Avenue, London, E.C.
Extract of Meat. Fray Bentos, Ox Tongues, Corned Beef, Meat
Meal for feeding- purposes, Manures.
939 Evans, Sons, & Co., 56, Hanover-street, Liverpool.
940 The Distillers Co., Limited, 12, Torpliichen-street,
Edinburgh.
A Collection of Grain and Malt Whiskies, London Gin, and
other Spirits. Spirits and Whiskies for export in bottle. Squire’s
Patent Yeast (Balloon brand) for bakers and confectioners.
94] Archibald Lauder, 76, Saucliiehall-street, Glasgow.
Whisky. Model of Still used in the distillation of pure malt
whisk}".
942 Liebig’s Wine Co., 12 , St. Helens Place, London ; and 68 ,
Higbfield-street, Liverpool.
Beef Wine, Canadian Extract of Beef, Malt Extract, Health
Sweets, Meat and Malt AVine.
943 The London and Counties Tea Co., Moulton-street,
Strangeways, Manchester.
944 James Marshall, Ibrox Flour Mills, Glasgow.
Preparation of AVheat, Farola, Semolina, Tritola, Granola, Ac.
Pure Foods prepared from wheat. Oat Flour, Ptyaloid, a pure digestive
of starch in the form of a dry powder.
946 Morgan and Wright, 102, High Petergate, York.
Sweet Extract of Chocolate. Dietetic Chocolate. Cocoas in
powder. Essence of Coffee. Chocolate Confectionery.
947 John L. Johnston, 10, Trinity Square, Tower Hill,
London.
Fluid Beef, Beef Flour, Peptonised Fluid Beef, Fluid Beef
Lozenges.
948 Henri Nestle, 9, Snow Hill, London, E.C.
Milk Food, a compound of milk, wheaten bread, and sugar.
Swiss Milk. Condensed Milk.
949 Hannay & Co., Clowes-street, West Gorton, Manchester.
CHEMICAL AND ALLIED INDUSTRIES.
197
949a Co-operative Wholesale Society, Limited, 1,
Balloon-street, Manchester ; works. Lower Crumpsall.
Biscuits and Sweets.
950 William Beckett, Springfield Works, Hey wood, near
Manchester.
Fruit Syrups, Noii-alcoholic Cordials and Liqueurs, Winterinc,
Tonic Bitters, Lime Fruit Juice, and other temperance beverages.
951 Pearson & Co., Limited, Cambridge-street, Lower
Broughton, Manchester, and Dunster House, Mincing-
lane, London.
Raw Chicory and its different processes of manuhicture and
packing. Raw Coffee and its different processes of roasting and
packing.
952 CoRNBROOK Brewery Co., Limited, Hulme, Manchester.
Beer and Spirits.
953 Benjamin Eobinson, Church-street, Pendleton, Man-
chester.
British Wines. Fruit Cordials and Juices. Soluble Essence of
Lemon and Orange Peel. Soluble Essence of Jamaica Ginger.
Universal Champagne.
954 Thomas Guest & Co., City Sugar and Confectionery
Works, Carruthers-street, Ancoats, Manchester.
Confectionery. Candied Peels. Jams. Boiled Sugars. Bottled
Fruits. Syrups. Fancy and Artistic Confectionery. Fondants.
Pralines. Comfits. Chocolates. Liquorice. Lozenges. Gum and
Gelatine Goods.
SECTION ITT.
PHOTOGR AP H Y.
John Ambler, Queen’s Chambers, 7, Market-street,
Manchester.
1. “ Carmen.” 2. Life-size Bust of the late Edward Hecht,
Esq. 3. Seymour Jackson, Esq., as Lionel, in the opera of “Marthji.”
Se}unour Jackson, Esq., as Thaddeus, in the opera of “The Bohemian
Girl.” Fred Gordon, Esq., as Count Arnheim, in the opera of “ The
Bohemian Girl.” View in Regent-road Gas Works, Salford.
Annan and Swan, 7, Devonshire-road, South Lambeth,
London, S.W.
Copper-plate Printing Press, in operation, printing Photo-
gravure Plates. 1. Orpheus and Eurydice, from painting by Sir
Frederick Leighton, P.R.A. 2. Sailor and Flo, from painting b}'
Gourley Steele, R.S.A. 3. Noble Waldman and Corrin, from painting
by Gourley Steele, R.S.A., both pictures belonging to the Queen.
4. March of Montrose, from painting by James A. Aitkcn. 5. Dr.
James Bonar, from painting by George Reid, R.S.A. 6. Fulton, the
American engineer who first applied steam as the motive power to
sailing vessels, and the earliest inventor of toi*pedoes. 7. Portrait of
the Queen, from di awing bj A. S. Cope. 8. Small Prints (various).
Autotype Co., 74, New Oxford-street, London.
Photographs by the Carbon Collotype and the Autogravure
Permanent Processes.
Samuel Lee Bapty, F.R.G.S., 36, Manor-road, Brockley,
Kent.
Photographic Enlargements of Microscopic Objects, principally
wood sections.
Bedford Lemere & Co., 147, Strand, London.
English Domestic Architecture. Chesterfield House, Mayfiiir
(Lord Burton’s) and other interiors and exteriors of mansions.
William Bedford, 326, Camden-road, London, N.
Framed Landscape Photographs. 1. The Castle and Mill,
Warwick. 2. Conway Castle. 3. River Scene, North Wales. 4.
At Bettws-y-Coed, North Wales. 5. Valle Crucis, North Wales.
H. B. Berkeley and Wm. Willis, 21, Southampton
Bow, London.
Platinotype Prints from own Negatives.
PHOTOGRAPHY.
199
L. Berry, Excelsior Studio, Chapel-street, Chorley,
Lancashire.
Frame of Photographs, including landscapes, portraits, figure
studies, studies of animals, &c. Negatives taken on Gelatine Bromide
Plates, and printed in silver, carbon, and on gelatine bromide paper.
Joshua Billcliff, 27, Bichmond-street, Boundary-
lane, C.-on-M., Manchester.
New Improved Long-focus Cameras, with patent revolving
adaptor, and all swings and movements required in photographic
cameras. Improved Tripod Stands with folding and sliding leg.
Archimedean Studio Camera Stand.
J AS. T. Blair, Whalley House, Whalley Bange,
Manchester.
One Frame containing the following : 1. The Linn of Dee ; 2. Con-
way Castle ; 3. Chee Tor, Millers Dale ; 4. Group of Ostriches ; 5. i
Blackpool; 6. Near Bettwys-y-Coed ; 7. Gauchos ; 8. Where Twines i
the Way; 9. Weeping Birches; 10. On the Dee, Braeraar; 11. j
Melrose Abbey; 12. Old Mar Castle; 13. View in Borrowdale ; 14. |
Derwentwater ; 15. The Seven Sisters, Braemar.
George Bagnall Bradshaw, Artist and Photographer
Beech House, Bowdon, Cheshire. |
1. Mezzo Enlarged Photograph, Sir Wm. Cunliffe Brooks, Bart, {
M.P., and Lady Brooks. 2. Mezzo Enlarged Photograph, Lotta, the |
miniature Neruda. 3. Mezzo Enlarged Photograph, Sejinour j
Jackson, local tenor singer. 4. Mezzo Enlarged Photograph, Fred !
Gordon, local bass singer. !
Warwick Brooks, 350, Oxford -street, Manchester. |
1 . Direct Portrait. 2. Panel Portraits. 3. Sister Arts. j
J. Milman Brown, High-street, Shanklin, Isle of j
Wight. '
Landscape Photographic Studies.
J. E. Bruton, The Abel Lewis Studio, 10, Finch-road,
Douglas, Isle of Man.
Frame, containing portraits in silver printing, assorted sizes.
William Joseph Byrne, Bichmond, Surrey.
1st Frame — Portraits photographed direct by daylight at sitters’
own residences, comprising some of the Vice-presidents of the
Exhibition. 2nd Frame — Panel Portraits taken direct, comprising
some of the Vice-presidents of the Exhibition, 3rd Frame — Grand
Panel Portraits taken direct. ' 4th Frame — Direct Photographs of
different sizes taken in two hours at Viscountess Hood’s residence.
200
SECTION III.
Archer Cl.vrke,
London.
St. John’s Cottage, Wandsworth^
Specimens of the various Substances and Chemicals used in
making- riiotographic Dry Plates, samples of Gelatine and Gelatino-
Bromide Emulsions in the various stages of Manufacture, also Photos
illustrating- the above.
John Collier, GG, New-street, Birmingham.
H.R.H. the Prince of AV ales and Shooting Party at
Sir J. AVm. Dawson, C.M.G,. M.A., F.R.S., President of the British
Association, 1886-1887. Sir Thos. Martincau, Kt., thrice Mayor of
Bradgate,
Birmingham. The Birmingham Art Gallery. James AVatt’s Work-
room at Heathfield Hall, Handsworth. One of Our Boys. Portrait
of a Lady, enlarged from carte de visite. Views in the Birmingham
streets on the occasion of the Queen’s visit, March 23, 1887.
Andrew Ainslie Common, F.R.S. G3, Eaton Bise,
Ealing, London.
Enlarged copy of a photograph of the Great Nebula in Orion,
taken with a 3ft. reflector, February, 1883,
W. Crooke, 103, Prince’s-street, Edinburgh.
Portrait of a Lady, printed on porcelain. Three Portraits of
Ladies, platinotype. Portrait of Edward Caird, Esq., platinotype.
Portrait of J. Stewart Smith, Esq., platinotype. Portrait of Clark
Stanton, Esq., R.S.A., platinotype. Portrait of Henry Doig, Esq.,
platinotype. Carstairs House, Lanarkshire, platinotype. Portrait
of W. E. Lockhart, Esq., R.S. A. (direct from life), plantinotype. A
Sikh (direct from life).
“Well by his visage you might know
He was a stalwart knight, and keen,
And had in many a battle been ;
His eyebrow dark, and eye of fire.
Showed spirit proud, and prompt to ire ;
Yet lines of thought upon his cheek
Did deep design and counsel speak.” — Marmion.
E. W. Davies, 11 , Peel Terrace, Old Trafford.
Series of Views : — 1. Conway Castle, North Wales. 2. Aground,
Castletown Harbour, Isle of Man. 3. East Towers, Conway Castle,
North Wales. 4. Kostherne Church, near Bowdon, Cheshire. 5. On
the Tame, Reddish, near Stockport.
6. Mcnai Bridge, North Wales.
Director-General, Ordnance
Survey Office, Southampton.
Survey, Ordnance
1. Negative of four T 7 -Arn Plans reduced to the scale of six inches
to a mile. 2. Platinotype from untouched negative, with examiner’s
remarks. 3. Photograpliic Transfer from retouched negative, ready
for laying do-wii on zinc. 4. Z incographic Impression of ditto, as
published. 5. Negative of Six-inch Sheet, reduced to the scale ot
1
PHOTOGRAPHY.
201
one inch to a mile. 6. Platinotype from untouched negative, with
examiner’s remarks. 7. Photographic Transfer from retouched
negative, ready for laying down on zinc. 8. Zincographic Impression
of above as published. 9. Platinotype of Sheet of 31-1 1-1 1 of Leicester
on the scale of 10ft. to the mile. 10. Photozincograph of Sheet
9-20, Brentford, on the scale of 5ft. to the mile. 11. Selected
Views of Jerusalem. 12. Selected Views of Peninsula of Sinai.
Henry Dixon & Sons, 112, Albany-street, Regent’s
Park, London.
1. Print from original negative and untouched carbon enlarge-
ment, Lion from Zoological Gardens, London. • 2. Print from original
negative and untouched carbon enlargement. Tiger, from Zoological
Gardens, London. 3. Prints from original negatives and untouched
carbon enlargements. Lions, Tigers, &c., from Zoological Gardens,
London. 4. Ditto ditto. 5. Shoeing the Bay Mare, by Landseer ;
copied by the Dixon and Gray Orthochromatic Process, in the
National Gallery, London (untouched). 6. The Fighting Temeraire,
Death of Nelson, and Ulysses Deriding Polyphemus, copied by the
Dixon and Gray Orthochromatic Process, in the National Gallery,
London (untouched). One of each by the old process, to show the
improvement by the new.
Edmund Eccles, 15, Broad-street, Bury, Lancashire.
Case of Photographs.
J. Edge, Photographic Engineer, 380, Stretford-road,
Manchester.
PhotogTaphic Rolling Press and Burnishers.
J. H. T. Ellerbeck, Donard Lodge, Yew Tree-road,
Walton, near Liverpool.
Photographic Views of Norway.
Robert Faulkner, 21, Baker-street, Portman Square,
London.
Two Studies of Expression. Portraits of Lilian Pelly, Child and
Kitten, and Constance Pelly. Instantaneous Portraits of Children.
Daughters of H.R.H. the Princess of Wales. Portrait of a Lady.
Simplicity.
Samuel Fry & Co., Limited Kingston Dry Plate Works,
Southsea-road, Kingston-on-Thames.
Direct Enlargements upon Fry’s Argentic Bromide Paper and
Opals. Also. Argentotype Prints.
J. P. Gibson, Fore-street, Hexham.
Eight Photographs of Landscapes.
Hy. Jas. Godbold, 8, Grand Parade, St. Leonards-on-
Sea.
Instantaneous Photographs.
J. P. Gotz, 19, Buckingham-street, Strand, London.
Camera.
Samuel Gratbix, Jun., West Point, Whalley Range,
Manchester.
Photographs taken in the winter months. 3 Views of Lodges
taken on — Tatton, Escp's Estate, Wythenshaw. 2 Views of Hough
End Farm, Chorlton-cum-Hardy. 7 Views of House and Ground,
Manley Park, near Manchester.
T. A. Green, Grasmere, Westmorland.
Four Framed Photographs, printed by the Platinotype process.
1. Langdale Pikes, Westmorland. 2. Near Ferry Nab, Windermere.
3. Study of Cattle. 4. Helvellyn and Fairfield, from Wythburn
Head Glyll.
Wm. Greenwood, 27, Bank Street, Red Bank, Man-
chester.
Scene in front of Exchange Station on the arrival of Mr. Glad-
stone in Manchester, June 25th, 1886, taken in one twentieth of a
second. The enlargement on Eastman’s Bromide Paper.
Mrs. Annie Greer, 12, Bolton-road, Pendleton,
Manchester.
Three Frames of Photographs. Composition Pictures. Study
of Heads. Photographs with coloured background.
Hadley, Geo., 36, Castle Hill, Lincoln.
Two Frames of Photographs.
Walter H. Harrison, The Studio, Yarhorough-street,
Alexandra Park, Manchester.
One Frame : Portrait Studies.
Vernon Heath, Piccadilly, London.
Carbon Enlargements, principally Landscapes.
A. L. Henderson, King William -street, London.
Vitrified Enamels.
Henry Paul et Prosper, Astronomers, a TObservatoire
de Paris.
1. Photograph of the Cluster in Gemini. 2. Three Photo-
graphs of Cygnus. 3. Photograph of a Part of the Moon (Enitos-
thenes. 4. Photogi’aphs of Jupiter. 5. Photograph of a Part of
Cassiopea. '
PHOTOGRAPHY.
203
J. H. Hogg, 71, Stricklandgate, Kendal.
Frame of Views in Westmorland. Frame of Portraits in Opal.
Portraits in Platinotype.
George Houghton & Son, 89, High Holborn, London,
W.C.
Photographic Apparatus and Specialities for the Dark Room.
John Ingham, Winton House, Sale, Cheshire.
1. Bromide Eolargement on Porcelain. 2 and 3. Photographs
on Porcelain. Permanent : single transfer. 4. Photographs on Por-
celain. Permanent : single transfer. 5. Girl and Dog : Bromide
Enlargement. 6. Girl and Child : Bromide Enlargement.
G. J. Johnson and I. Watts, Hale, Altrincham.
Photo-Micrographs, enlarged on Bromide Paper.
John Jones, 40, Wellington-street, Moss Side, Man-
chester.
Four Photographs (Cabinet). 1. Portrait, taken in a garden,
silver print. 2. Portrait of my Son, on Eastman’s Paper. 3.
Residence of the late Councillor Goldschmidt, silver print. 4. Snow
Scene in Alexandra Park, on Eastman’s Paper.
Richard Keene, All Saints’, Derby.
Six Photographs used in Book Illustration. Platinotype.
Paul Lange, Dod’s Buildings, 6, Chapel-street,
Liverpool.
Instantaneous Photographs Printed in Platinotype. 1. Approach-
ing Storm, Holy Loch, Clyde, Scotland. 2. Cloud Efect, Kirn Shore,
Clyde, Scotland. 3. A Strong Breeze, off New Brighton, River
Mersey. 4. Scotch Foxhounds.
John W. Leigh, Holly House, Northenden, Manchester.
Lledr Valley : Collodio albumen dry plate. 2. Ditto. 3. Mill
on the Machno, do. 4. Pandy Mill Farm, do. 5. Aberandfrach
Harbour, do. 6. Chorley Hall, do.
London and County Photographic Co., 63, St. Paul’s
Churchyard, London.
Various Photographic Views of Old Manchester and the
Exhibition.
The London Stereoscopic and Photographic Co.,
Limited, 108 and 110, Regent -street, London, W..
and 54, Cheapside, London, E.C.
Frame of Amateurs’ Photographs, taken by Pupils.
•I"
204
SECTION III.
J. A. Lugard, 11, Chichester Terrace, Shepherds’ Bush,
London, W.
A Frame coutainiiig examples of a series of 100 Photographs
illustrating incidents connected with the Biirmah Expeditionary
Force, published as an Albun, interleaved with Descriptive Notes, by
the Author, Lieut. -Col. W. W. Hooper, 4th Prince of Wales’s Own,
Madras Light Cavalry, late Provost Marshal of the Burmah Ex-
peditionaiy Force.
Manchester Photographic Society; hon. sec., W. I.
Chadwick, Brooklands, Manchester.
Landscape Photography (Amateur).
S. D. McKellen, Spring Gardens, and Marriott’s Court ;
works, 3, Chapman-street, Hulme, Manchester.
Double Pillion Treble Patent Cameras. Patent 3-fold Camgrip
Tripod. Patent Developing Rocker. Patent View Funder and
Auxiliary Focusser. Patent Instantaneous Shutter. Watei*proof and
other Cases for carrying apparatus. Lenses for Photographic pui’poses.
Mrs. Main, 56, Westbourne Terrace, Hyde Park,
London.
I. Three Views from the Nadelhorn, printed in silver. 2. Three
Engadine Views. 3. Three Views of Frost-covered Trees, printed
in Platinotype.
James C. Milner, 67, King-street, Manchester.
1. The Village Mill. 2. Far from the Madding Crowd. 3
Norwegian River Scenery. 4. Bits from Old Ireland.
Thomas Henry Morton, M.D., Don House, Briglitside,
Sheffield.
1. Suez Canal; Colombo Harbour, Suez; Akyab Town Hall.
2. House in Calcutta ; Cemetery at Kyouk, Phyoo ; Bungalow ;
Government Scl^ool, Phyoo. 3. Wayside Tomb ; Golden Pagodas,
Akyab; Native Hut; Oreetong. 4. Bungalow^; Hindoo Temple,
Akyab; Interior of ditto; Family Group. 5. Avenue; Buddhist
Monastery; Pagodas, Akyab; Christian Church.
James Mudd & Son, 10, St. Ann’s Square, Manchester.
1. Enlarged Photograph of Locomotive Engine and Tender.
2. Enlarged Photograph of Crank Axle. 3. Photograph of Loco-
motive Engines. 4. Photograph of Miscellaneous Machinery. 5.
Photogi’aph of Mill.
The Manchester Amateur Photographic Club ; E.
Openshaw, 24, Ward’s Buildings, Manchester.
Moreton Old Hall, near Congleton. Cottage at Biddulph, near
Congleton. On the River Wye, Bakewell, Derbyshire. At Thorpe,
IS
m
Derbyshire. Old Mill, Thorpe, Derbyshire. Dovedale, Derbyshire.
Haddon Hall (The Ballroom). Study, in the Woods, 'Worsley.
Study, in the Woods, Worsley. Study, at Ash ford-in-the- Waters.
Eevd. Henry James Palmer, M.A., The Vicarage,
Christ Church, Ashton-under-Lyne.
1. Framed Photograph of Rouen Cathedral. 2. Framed Photo-
graph of Rheims Cathedral. 3. Framed Photograph of Chartres
Cathedral. 4. Framed Photograph of Zermatt and the Matterhorn.
5. Framed Photograph of Cima di Jazzi, Switzerland. 6. Framed
Photograph of Monte Rosa, from Macugnaga. 7. Frame containing
Twelve Transparencies of Views in Switzerland.
John S. Pollitt, Barlow’s Court, 43, Market Street,
Manchester.
1. Frame containing Two Interiors in Dunham Hall. 2. Frame
containing Two Views of Houses at Bowdon. 3. Frame containing
Two Interiors at Hardwick Hall. 4. Frame containing Morton
Hall, and Ballroom at Haddon. 5. Frame containing Exterior of
Chatsworth House, and Boudoir at Dunham Hall. 6. Frame con-
taining Swans Enlargements on Gelatino (Bromide Paper.)
Alfred Pumphrey, 62, Stanhope-street, Birmingham.
Nineteen Transparencies printed on Pumphrey’s Lantern Plates.
Charles W. and Frank N. Eailton, Alderley Edge,
near Manchester.
1. The Rialto, Venice. 2. The Bridge of Sighs, Venice. 3. The
Ghetto (or Jews’ quarter), across the Grand Canal, Venice. 4. Gar-
dens of the Villa Serbelloni, Lake Como, Italy. 5. Lake Como,
Italy. 6. Monte Crocione, Lake Como. 7. Town and Harbour of
Zante, one of the Ionian Islands. 8. Old Mill, Alderley, Cheshire.
9. Steam Launch on Canal. Instantaneous — 10. (a) Steamer
Approaching Pier, Brodick, Arran, N.B. (b) Clock Lighthouse on
the Clyde, from deck of steamer passing at full speed, (c) Sailing
Vessel and Tug on the Clyde, N.B., from deck of a steamer passing
at full speed, (d) Island of Arran, N.B., from deck of steamer
passing at full speed. 11. (a) The Bridge, Kinloch Rannoch, Perth-
shire, N.B. (h) Villa Serbelloni, Italy. (c) Black and White
Cottage, A.D. 1687, x\lderley, Cheshire, (d) Alderley Old Hall,
Cheshire.
Charles Eeid, Wishaw, N.B.
Studies of Animals.
H. P. Eobinson, Great Hall Studio, Tunbridge Wells.
Photograph from Nature, entitled Dawn and Sunset.
; 206
I
SECTION ITT.
Egbert N. Eoss-Murray, Kinnaliaird, Strathpeffer,
Eoss-shire.
Photographic Views of Australian Scenery taken by the wet and
dry process.
Sands and Hunter, 20, Cranbourn-street, Leicester
Square, London, W.C.
Photographic Cameras for Tourists, Amateurs, and Professionals.
Instantaneous Shutters. Portable Folding Tripods. Dark-room
Lanterns, and other Photographic Apparatus.
Frederick Salis Schwabe, Ehodes, Middleton.
Photographic Views of The Alhambra, Tangier, and
Aix-les-Baius.
A. Sauvy, 22a, King-street, Manchester.
A Frame of Direct-taken Photographs.
Stanislas Julian, Count Ostrorog '‘Walery,’’ 164,
Eegent-street, London, W.
1. Portrait, nearly life size, of H.M. the Queen. 2 Case of
Miniatures on enamelled copper, fixed by fire.
William Ford-Stanley, 13, Eailwaj Approach, London
Bridge.
Photographic Cameras, &c.
Jas. Hy. Steward, 406, 66, and 456, Strand, and 54,
Cornhill, London.
Optical Lanterns and Dissolving VieAv Apparatus. The Bridge-
man Triple Lantern. Portable I’riple Lantern. The Luke Bi-Unial
and J. H. Steward’s Standard Bi-Unial and Institution Lanterns,
New High-pressure Compressed Gas Cylinders and Automatic Gas
Pressure Valves. Oxy-ether Lime Light, Beard’s Self-centreing
Carries and Dissolving View Slides and Effects.
Harry Symonds, 39, High-street, Portsmouth.
Yacht Racing Scenes, taken from a sailing boat.
James Swift and Son, 81, Tottenham Court-road,
London, W.
Micioscopes, Microscopical Apparatus, Camera Lenses, and
General Photographic Apparatus.
J. E. Thornton, 3, New Lorne-street, Moss Side,
Manchester.
Photographic Apparatus. Thornton’s Patent Camera, Roller
Slide, Shutter. Exhibition Detective Camera. Satchel Detective
PHOTOGRAPHY.
207
Camera. Tripod Stands. Cheap Cameras. Tyler’s Metal Slides.
Thornton’s Patent Automatic Advertiser. Specimens of Enlarged
Portraits, by the Patent Air Brush.
John Tonge, Styal, Handforth, near Manchester.
Wild Birds’ Nests, photographed from nature, in StyaL and
Ringwa}".
Harry Tolley, 9, All Saints-street, Nottingham.
1. Idle Moments, Lowestoft, platinotype 2. Haddon Hall,
plainotype. 3. White-robed Nature, Wilford, Notts, bromide prints.
A A Frosty Walk, Wilford, Notts, bromide prints.
H. Dacre Tonge, Croston Towers, Alderley Edge,
Cheshire.
In Frame : Church, Gawsworth, Cheshire ; The Rectory,
Gawsworth, Cheshire; Church, Gawsworth, Cheshire; Welsh Row,
Alderley Edge ; Gamekeeper’s Cottage, Alderley Edge. Cricket
Group, Fettes College, Edinburgh. Instantaneous Photograph of
Horse.
Waterlow & Sons, Limited, Finsbury Stationery
Works, London, E.C.
Examples of reproduction by modern processes of photographic
printing and engraving : (a) Collotype Printing, (b) Woodbury
Printing, (c) Photo-relief Blocks for surface printing from line
drawings, wash drawings, and negatives from nature.
N. Watson & Sons, 313, High Holhorn, London.
Photographic Cameras, Lenses, and Appurtenances. Watson’s
New Detective Cameras. Portable Photographic Outfits for Travel-
lers. Watsons Cameras for Micro-Photography. Cameras for Celes-
tial Photography. 4-fold Cyclist’s Tripod Stand. Lanterns for
Photo-Enlargements. Instantaneous Exposure Shutters. Com-
plete Outfits for Students in Photography. Watson’s Patent Dark
Slides for Cameras.
G. West & Son, Palmerston Road, Southsea, Hants.
Studies of Yacht-racing, photographed from a small sailing boat.
William Watts & Son, 41, South King-street, Man-
chester.
Patent Adjustable Walking-stick Camera Stand. Ditto, erected
full height; do., for hillside; do., lowest elevation.
Weatherley Bros., 4, Bradshawgate, Bolton.
Permanent Carbon Photograph, in Monochrome, of J. M. Rutter,
Esq., of Bolton. Oil Painting on Porcelain. Specimens of the new
Statuette, Vignette Photographs, and others.
1
SECTION III,
E. Leadek Williams, The Oaks, Altrincham.
Three Photographs, enlarged by the Autotype Company, London,
from exhibitors’ negatives. 1. A AVoreestershire Cottage. 2. The Sand
Cart, Colwyn Bay. 3. In the Birch AVood.
F. Woodcock, Stanley House, Douglas Head, Douglas,
Isle of Man.
Photogi’aphs of the Island and Lifeboat.
Mattheav Whiting, 190, Lavender Hill, Wandsworth,
London.
12 Scotch and English A^iews.
J. B. B. Wellington, 38, Fellows-road, South
Hampstead, London.
Frame of Transparencies for the Lantern made by the Collodio-
Bromide process.
SECTION IV.
HANDICEAFTS
1101 A.. G. Thoknton, 109, Deansgate, Manchester; works,
Sidney-street, Salford.
English Drawing Instruments in process of manufacture. Drawing.
Instruments. Drawing Boards. and Set Squares. Parallel Rulers.
Mining Dial. Surveying Level, The Premier. Levelling Staves.
Steel Scale Tape. Copying Process for reproducing tracings.
Specialities in Drawing and Tracing Papers, Cloths, Mounted Paper,
Pencils, Colour Slabs, Paper Surface Cleaners, Fasteners, Rules,
Scales, &c., &c.
1102 James Higham, 382, Oldham-road, Newton Heath,
Manchester.
Patent Circular Knitting Machines and Knitted Hosiery.
1103 M. A. Turner & Co., Sunbury-on-Thames, Middlesex.
Designing for Embroidery, Lace, Braiding, &c. Etching on
Textiles. Irish Point and Limerick Lace Making. Embroideries,
and Tambour Working. Embroidery Frames.
1104 W. J. PiNTNER, 3, Bath-street, Lytham.
Specimens of Handmade Lace. Torchon, Maltese, Irish Point,
Point de Flandre, Point de Brussels, Point de Venice, Point de
Burano, and Point d’Aleiigon. Thread for Lacemaking.
1105 Wood, (late Abraham,) 17 and 20, Lord-street,
• Liverpool.
Process of Manufacture of Lenses illustrated. The Standard
Test for Eyesight. Optical Instruments.
1106 B. Hembry & Co., 43 and 47, Cross-street, Albert
Square, Manchester; 16, Newgate-street, London,
E.C. ; 33 and 35, North John-street, Liverpool. .. '
Linoleum Floorcloths. Linoleum Wall Decorations, and Patent
Stair Nosings. The Process of Linoleum Floorcloth Printing.
Samples of the Different Materials used in the Manufacture of
Linoleum Floorcloth.
212
SECTION IV.
1107 James Foster, 75, Oxford-street, Manchester, and 41,
Friarg’ate, Preston.
Knitting Machine, with hand or steam-driving apparatus. One
Side Knitting- Machine, 31 Jin., 8 needles. Victoria Knitting Machine.
Transparent Pattern Knitting Machines. Union Knitter. Concordia
Knitter. Lancashire Knitter. Circnlar Knitting Machine. Auto-
matic Winder. Seaming Machine. Bordering Machine.
1109 The Waterbury Watch (sales) Company, Limited,
17, Holborn Viaduct, London, E.C.
Waterbury Watches.
1110 John Preston, 1a, Wilton Place, Belgrave Square,
London, S.W.
Indian Products and Indian Art Work illustrated.
nil Antonino Fisichella, Italian Consulate, Liverpool.
Different Specimens of Shell, Stone, and Glass Engraving.
1112 Arthur George Dawson, Castlefield Works, Yincent-
street, Macclesfield; and 14, Ivy-lane, Paternoster Row,
London, E.C.
The Dawson-Adams Jacquard Pattern or Trial Weaving
x\pparatus, and Ruling Machinery for the production of design
paper and other ruled work.
1113 W. J. Thompson, Indian Bazaar, Saint John, New
Brunswick, Canada.
Indian Goods, principally manufactured by the Canadian
Indians, with Indians at work, showing how the goods are manu-
factured.
1114 Samuel Harris Levi, 43, London Wall, and Dutoitspan,
Soutli Africa.
Machine, in motion, for cutting Crocidolite, Jasper, Chalcedony,
Ac. ; articles manufactured from the above materials. Machine, in
motion, for cutting Diamonds, Amethyst, Ac. ; articles manufactured
from the above materials. Crocidolite and Diamonds in the raw
material.
1115 R. E. Eades, 30a, Wharf-road, City-road, London.
Ivory Turning, Carving, and all kinds of Foreign Nuts in process.
Lustres, Monuments, Cups, (diessmen, Paperknives, Chandeliers,
Pianos, Flower Vases, Brooclies, Ear Rings, Lockets, Crosses, Neck-
lets, Scarf Pins, Bracelets, Watch and Ring Stands, Ac.
IIIG Ollivant k Botsford, 2, Exchange-street, Manchester.
Electro-gilding and plating.
1117 Yessiere Aine, Baccarat (Meurthe and Moselle), France.
Artistic Engra’ving on Glass.
1118 Doulton & Go., London, Burslem, Bowley Be^is, St.
Helens, Smethwick, Liverpool, Manchester, Birming-
ham, and Paris.
Processes of Pottery Manufacture : Throwing, or forming shapes
on the wheel. Lathing. Carving, Etching, Modelling, and other
methods of decoration on the unburnt ware. Faience decorations on
biscuit (terra cotta) ware. Printing from copper plates, and trans-
ferring the prints to vases, plates. The Pavilion in which these
processes are shown is an archway 15ft, wide and 18ft. high, and
above it is a gallery terminated at either end by minarets. On
either side of the archway are arcades, through which will be seen
the handicrafts above mentioned. The interior is fitted up with
cupboards and apparatus employed in the processes showm. Im-
mediately behind the pavilion in an annexe are kilns, erected for the
rapid burning of work made or decorated at the Exhibition. One
kiln will be used for biscuit firing, two other kilns for glazing and
enamelling. The room in front of the kilns contains an engine for
driving the potter’s wheel and lathe, and in the same room glazing
and other processes accessory to the complete firing will be carried on.
1119 W. H. Bailey & Co., Albion Works, Salford, Man-
chester.
Bailey’s Patent British Empire Clock. — For description see
Complimentary List.
1121 James H. Maden, 11, Thomas-street, Shudehill,
Manchester.
Manufacture of English Dolls. Dressing of Dolls in Wool and
Stuft' Dresses.
1122 Joseph Lyons, 60, Brondesbury Villas, Kilburn,
London.
Process of grinding and Polishing Lenses for Spectacles and Eye-
glasses from Brazilian Pebbles.
1124 London Flower Girl Mission; John A. Groom,
Hon. Supt. ; His Excellency the Earl of Aberdeen,
K.P., Presidents, Sekforde-street ; and 11 and 12,
Clerkenwell Close, London, E.C.
Artificial Flowers. Plants. Bridal, Ball, and Presentation
Bouquets. Baskets of Flowers. Wreaths, Crosses, etc. Yines and
Creeping Plants.
SECTION IV
1125
1126
1127
1128
The Committee of the Boys and Girls’ Eefuges and
Homes, Strangeways, Manchester.
Handicraft Work in process of production by inmates of the
Institution, consisting of Carpentry, Firewood, Shoemaking,
Tailoring.
J. F. & G. Harris, 58, Wilson-street, Finsbury,
London, E.C.
Fancy Wood Decorations, made in the form of moulded match
boardings of various woods, and relieved by inserting beads of
various shapes and colours.
Bailey and Williamson, Designers and Engrave I's on
Wood, 76, Howarth’s Buildings, Cross-st., Manchester.
Framed specimens of Wood Engi'avings, with the different
articles used in the business.
Margaret Hodgkins, 5, Beaufort Avenue, Burton-
road, Withington, near Manchester.
Skeletonised Leaves, Flowers, Seed Vessels, and Ferns, &c.,
illustrative of the art of botanical anatomy, as adapted to the studj^
of the science of botany and home decoration.
1129
Karl Tckelheimer, Market Erbach, Bavaria ; Agent,
James Cugnoni, 44, Ellington-street, Barnsbury,
London.
Pui*se, Bag, and Jewel Case Manufacture.
1130 Howard Trotman, 4, Camden-road, London, N.W.
Lamp Shades, Candle Siuules, Stove Ornaments and Screens,
Splashei*s, Decorative Articles and Appliances, and Tools and Machines
for the Manufacture of the same. The Process of the Manufacture
of Lamp Shades, Screens, Ac.
1131 The Self-Winding and Synchronising Clock Co.,
Limited, 52, Queen Victoria-street, London, E.C. ; 65,
Victoria-street, Liverpool ; and Faulkner- street,
Manchester.
Clocks Wound by Electric Motors, and Synchronised by the
Electric CuiTent.
1132 L. CouRLANDER, Kimberley, South Africa.
Various Descriptions of Jewellery, and manufiicture of same.
1133 Joseph Higham, 127, Strangeways, Manchester.
Electro-plated and Brass Musical Instruments, Flutes,
Drums, Ac.
hr
1134 Alfred A. Davis, 66, Huntley-street, Tottenham Court-
road, London, W.C.
Mechanical, Scientific and Educational Toys, and Fancy Metal
Work, Models, Electro-motors, Coils, Cranes, &c. Shown in process
of manufacture.
1135 Joseph and Gluckstein (agent, M. Gluckstein, 44,
St. George’s Place, Albert Gate, London), Victoria
West, South Africa.
Cigars, Tobacco, Cigarettes, and Tobacconists’ Goods, manu-
factured chiefly from South African products in the Exhibition.
1136 Guiseppe Guetta, Da Mula’s Palace, Murano and
Venice.
Process of manufacturing Venetian Beads of all sorts. Spun
Glass, Scent Bottles, &c.
1137 William Avery & Son, Headless Cross, Pedditch.
Process of Sticking Pins by machinery.
1138 W. Scott Hayward & Co., 59, Deansgate, and 78,
Barton Arcade, Manchester.
Process of the manufacture of Jet Jewellery and Ornaments,
comprising cameo cutting, carving, engraving, faceting, gashing,
grinding, polishing, shagging, and turning. Specimens of Hard
English Blue, Yellow, and Burnt Skin Jet, Soft English Jet, Hard
Spanish Blue and Yellow Skin Jet, Soft Spanish Jet.
1139 Annie Belt. 20, Milton-street, West Hartlepool.
MiiTors, Brackets, Plaques, Banneretts, Jubilee Cards, &c., in
leather and gutta percha work.
1140 The City Wood Engraving Co. (Farrell and Jepson),
Arcade Chambers, St, Mary’s Gate, Manchester.
Specimens of Drawing and Engraving on wood. Photography
and Electrotyping. Engravings in progress. Men in actual work
upon engravings. Wood Engraving Machine.
r
Irish Section.
1151 John S. Brown & Sons, 12, Bedford-street, Belfast ; 26,
Gresham-street, London; 116, Franklin-street, New
York.
Damask Table Linen. Linen Sheetings. Linen Cambric Hand-
kerchiefs, plain, hem-stitched, embroidered, and printed. Shirting
Linens. Towels and Towelling. Birdseye and Russian Diapers.
Embroideries on linen goods. Hand-made Linen Buttons. Flax in
various stages of manufacture.
1152 Smythe & Co., Balbriggan ; 37, Lower Abbey-street,
Dublin ; 3 and 4, Milk-street, London, E.C.
Ladies’ Cotton, Cashmere, and Merino Hose. Gentlemen’s
Cotton, Cashmere, and Merino Half-hose.
1153 Frederick Wm. Hayes & Co., Seapatrick Mills, Ban-
bridge, Ireland.
Linen Threads for hand or machine use. Harness Cords for
looms. Cotton Threads for shoe work, &c. Line and Tow Yarns.
Samples of Flax Straw, and Flax, rough and dressed.
1154 Abraham Wilson and Armagh Spinning Co., Ed ward-
street Mill, Newry ; Drumcairne Mill, Armagh.
Flax and Tow Yarns. Flax and Tow in process of manufacture.
Flax and Dressed Line, Linen Threads.
1155 Brookfield Linen Co., Limited, 30, Donegall-street,
Belfast, and Brooklield, Belfast.
Bleached Linens. Linen Diapers, Huckabacks, and Drills.
Cream and Rough Brown Linens. Striped and Checked Rough
Brown Linen Drills. Plain, Striped, and Checked Linen Glass
Towels. Bordered, Lettered, Striped, and Checked Linen Glass
Cloth, in piece. Striped and Checked Dyed Linen Hollands, Brown,
Black, Slate, Chocolate, (fcc. Linen Canvas, Brown, Black, White,
Slate, Chocolate, &c. Costume Linens, Brown, Fancy, and Indigo
D}^ed. Linen Crash, Brown and Bleached. Linen Huckaback and
Damask Towels, plain and fancy borders and fringes. Linen Cambric
Handkerchiefs, hem-stitched and bordered. Damask and Damask
Napkins.
1156 J. AND L. F. Goodbody, Clara, King’s Co. Ireland.
Sacks and Sacking. Tarpaulins. Brattice Cloths. Hop Pocketing.
Baling Cloth. Jute Yarns and Twines. Packing Cord and Ropes.
f
1157
1158
1159
1160
1161
1162
1163
1164
1165
IKISH SECTION.
CoRMiCK Cannon, The Glenties, Co. Donegall, Ireland.
Home-spim and Hand-made Grey Tweed. Home-spun and
Hand-made Grey Frieze. Home-spun and Hand-made Milled Tweed
(grey). Home-spun and Hand-made "White Flannel.
Charles John Maybury, AsligroYe Woollen Factory,
Keninare.
Ken mare lYoollen Tweeds.
The Convoy Woollen Co., Convoy Raphoe, Co.
Donegall.
Ladies’ and Gentlemen’s Serge, Gents’ Heavy Tweeds, Gents’
Light or Donegall Tweeds, Travelling Rugs, Wrap Shawls, Horse
(’overs, Flannel, Plaiden, and Shirting. Hosieiy and Yarn.
Hill & Sons, Lucan and Blue Bell Woollen Factories,
Co. Dublin.
Irish Friezes, Tweeds, and Serges.
Athlone Woollen Mills Co. Gleeson Smith & Co.,
Shannon and Burnbrook Mills, Athlone, Ireland.
Irish Tweeds. Shannon Tweeds. Connemara Tweeds. Cheviot
Tweeds. Saxony Tweeds. Pure Irish Wool Serges. Irish Dress
Goods. Pure Irish Wool Friezes. Shannon Fingerings.
County Down Flax Spinning and Weaving Co.,
Limited, Loop Bridge, Co. Down ; and 1 , 2, 3, 4,
Donegall Square, Belfast.
Piece Goods, Handkerchiefs, Towels, Ac.
Dwyer & Co., Limited, 24 and 25, Great Georges-
street, Cork.
Irish Hand-worked Crochet Lace. Royal Jubilee Lace.
C. &. J. O’Sullivan, Cork.
Manufactured Curled Hair in Rope, and teased ready for
upholstery purposes. Hair in the raw state. Bed Feathers and
Downs washed and purified. Feathers in the raw or unmanufactured
state.
Samuel R. Greer & Co., Court- street' Factory,
Newtownards, Co. Down.
Boys’ Knitted Suits. Boys’ Hose and Half Hose. Ladies and
Children’s Hose. Men’s Hose and Half Hose. Men’s Cardigan
Jackets. Ladies’ Inside Vests. Ladies’ Outside Jerseys. Tam-
o’-Shanter Hats. Ladies’ Knitted Hats. Children’s and Girls’
Costumes Knitted.
IRISH SECTION. 221
1166 Booth and Fox, Cork; 81 Hatton Garden, London;
Mark-lane, Manchester.
Down Quilts and Down Clothing. Purified Feathei*s for
Bedding. Curled Hair for Upholstering.
1167 PiM Bros., Limited, South Great Georges-street, Dublin.
Boys’, Youths’, and Men’s Suits. Manufactured from Irish
Tweeds.
1168 Women’s Industries.
(1) Superioress, Presentation Convent, Youghal. — Needlepoint Lace
Border. Fan Cover in Youghal Lace. Needlepoint Lace
Lappet. Needlepoint Lace Pocket Handkerchiefs.
(2) Ursuline Convent, Cork. — Baby’s Dress, Guipure Lace. Fine
Lace. Lace D’Oyleys. Pincushion. Spanish Set. Long Lace
Collar. Lace.
(3) Mrs. Hall Dare, NewTownbarry, Co. Wexford.— Tea-cloth
Italian Reticula. Broad Insertion (not for sale). Insertion.
(4) Sisters of Charity, Asylum for the Blind, Merion. — Lace
Flounce.
(5) Mrs Burke, Omer, Headford, Co. Galway. — Head ford Lace.
(6) Convent of Poor Clares, Kenmare, Co. Kerry. — Fan, Irish
needlepoint lace. Handkerchief, Irish needlepoint lace.
Furniture Trimming. Flounce, in linen thread. Photographs
of Lace and Designs.
(7) Carmelite Convent, New Ross, Wexford. — Border Needlepoint
Lace. Handkerchief Needlepoint. Border. Crochet Collars.
Crochet Borders.
(8) Presentation Convent, Killarney. — Yellow' Silk Lace. Reticella
Lace. Pocket Handkerchief. Reticella Squares. Nettled Lace
Specimen. Nettled Black Lace (silk). D’Oyleys.
(9) Mrs. Pow'er Lalor, Loiigorchard, Templemore. — Parsonstow'ii
Lace Flounce. Parsonstowm Lace Scarf. Parsonstowm Lace
I’rimming. Parsoiistown Lace Handkerchief. Birr Lace Hand-
kerchiefs. Specimen Yenetian Point. Specimen Trimming.
Cap. Corsage. Carrickmacross Guipure Frock. Carrickmacross
Applique Robe. Specimen Applique Lace. Guipure Handker-
chief. Applique Christening Veil. A pplique Scarf. Needlepoint
Lappet. Communion Set. Specimens Needlepoint. Cap.
Collar and Cuffs Needlepoint. Needlepoint Fichu. Black
Limerick Lace Scarf. Black Limerick Dress and Trimmings.
White Limerick Dress and Trimmings. Reticella Tea Cloths.
Crochet Robe. Crochet Pincushion Cover. Crochet Mantel
Border. Strip for Counterpane. Crochet Trimming. Veiy Fine
Crochet. Moorish Point Collar and Cuffs. Pincushion Covers.
Moorish Point. Moorish Trimming. Wide, Medium, and Narrow'
Torchon Flax Lace. Piece of Crochet Work.
(23) Viscountess de Vesci, Abbeyleix, Queen’s County, — Specimens
of Carving. Toilet Cover. Pocket Handkerchief. Mitts.
Grey Gloves. Coloured Gloves.
(24) James CrosbiEj Bangor, County Down. — Embroidered Pillow
Cover. Pillow to show cover. Embroidered Pincushion com-
plete. Embroidered Nightdress Case. Handkerchief Letters,
Monogram, Ac.
(25) Mrs. Power Lalor, Long Orchard, Templemore. — Coverlet,
Mountmellick Embroidery. Sheet Sham. Pillow Sham. Strip
Red Glencolombkill Embroidery. Strips, white, red, and blue.
Tea Cosy Sides. Satin Painted d’Oyleys. Satin Painted
Pincushions. Embroidered Gloves. Tea Cloths. Leek
Embroidery. Lawn Tennis Dresses, embroidered red.
(26) Pauline Costello, 1, Russel Place, Dublin. — Plush Mantel
Border, with curtains embroidered. Cushion.
(27) Mbs. M. S. Egan. — 60, Eccles-street, and R.I.C. Barracks,
Dublin. — Sprawl Cushion, in Oriental embroidery. Sofa Bolster,
richly worked.
(28) Irish Association for Training and Employment of Women,
21, Kildare-street, Dublin. — Photographs. Frame, specimen
of wood engraving. China Plaques, viz., “Gioconda” (original),
and “ Lorenzo ” (original). Specimens of Illuminating. Illu-
minated Borders in five frames. Illuminated Address. Illu-
minated Title, and frame, showing progress made by pupil in
three months iu a class meeting once a week. Pieces of Wood
Carving, viz., Bunch of Hops, a study in rough carving.
Walnut top of Bellows Celtic Carving. Panel, with grotesque
head in centre. Oak Stool. Photo Frame (ivy). Specimens
of Scrivenery, Engrossed Mortgages. Engrossment and Fair
Copy of Conveyance. Fair Copy of Surrender of Lease.
Specimens of Plan Tracing, viz.. Elevation of Museum, and
Elevation of Public Library, Belfast.
( 29 )
Mrs. J. W. Sinclair, Bonny Glen, Inver, Donegall. — Piece
Embroidery on Cotton Tapestry. Banner Screen on Satin Cloth.
Pillow Shams. Red Gauze Handkerchief. Pincushion Covers.
Pincushion Covers (Mrs. Harvey). White Gauze Handkerchief
Embroidery. Primroses, heliotrope colour. Cambric Pocket
Handkerchiefs. Silk Handkerchiefs. Pincushion. Nightdress
(American) Trimming. Child’s Dress, white flannel.
1
IRISH SECTION.
223
(30) Mrs. Dease, Tiirbotstown, Coole, West Meath. — Embroidered
Crape Chair Backs. Embroidered Coloured Linen Aprons.
Diagonal Cloth Tablecover. Holland Tablecover. Red Applique
on Diagonal Cloth. Blue and White Linen Chair Back.
, Red Linen Embroidered Chair Biick.
(31) Mrs. Bagwell, Marl field, Clonmell. — Nightgowns. Pair
Drawers. Aprons. Child’s Worked Frocks. Pillow Slips, worked.
(32) Mrs. Power Lalor, Long Orchard, Templemore. —Silk Vest,
hand made. Nightdress. Chemises. Pairs of Drawers.
Baby’s Flannel Shawl. Baby’s Shirt. Gentlemen’s Shirts,
embroidered. Children’s Chemises. Children’s Drawers. Flannel
Jacket. Flannel Petticoat. Smocks. Monthly Gown. White
Knitted Shawl. Pink Knitted Shawl. Child’s Petticoat
(crochet). Opera Wrap. Baby’s Reversible Jacket. Knitted
Hunting Gloves. Cape. Knitted Petticoat. Cloud. Painted
Glasses. Baby’s Boots. Knitted Vest.
(33) Miss Mary McDonough, Rosscahill, Galway, Ireland. — White
Knitted Shawl.
(34) Margaret Cree, Rosemount, Blackrock, Dublin. — Knitted
Cotton Quilt.
(35) Alicia M. Young, Dunmanway, Co. Cork. — Small size
Hand-knit Quilt.
(36) Miss Hamilton, 63, Fitzroy Avenue, Belfast. — Scarlet Hand-
knitted Lady’s Combination. Scarlet Hand-knitted Lady’s
Bodice.
(37) Miss Burke (in trust). Shamrock Lawn, Douglas, Cork. —
Hand-knitted Wraps. Hand-knitted Gloves.
(38) Miss Frances Fitzgerald, Glanleam, Valencia Island. — Man’s
Jersey, blue. Boys’ Jersey, white. Socks. Shooting Stockings.
Women’s Stockings, merino, fingering, two-yarn. Gloves,
fimcy, black, white, merino, and children’s.
(39) Mrs. A. P. Stokes, Hon. Sec. Industrial Association, Mount-
mellick. — Table Cloth. Toilet Cover. Pillow Sham. Sacs de
Nuit. Brush Bags. Set Mats. Cheese Mats. Baby’s Bibs.
Five o’clock. Tennis Apron. Bed Pocket.
(40) Miss A. M. J. B. Hackett, 117, Leinster Road, Rathmines,
Dublin, — Mountmellick Work Toilet Cover, worked with white
cotton, on white sateen, trimmed with fringe. Mountmellick
Nightdress Bag, w^orked with white cotton, on wdiite sateen,
trimmed with fringe. Mountmellick Brush and Comb Bag,
Morked with white cotton, on white sateen, trimmed with fringe.
(41) Miss Scott, Castlefin. — Nightgown, real Valenciennes lace.
Chemise. Drawers. Nightdress, in Torchon lace. Chemise.
Knicker Drawers. Nightdress, in real Valenciennes lace.
Knickers. Child’s Pinafore. Jubilee Set, machine-made, contain-
ing Nightdress and Chemise.
(42) Miss Scott. — Nightdresses. Combination. Chemise.
IRISH SECTION.
(43) The Sisters of Charity Asylum for Blind Mission. —
Combination. NightgOM’n. Chemise.
(44) Dungarvan Industrial Association, Diingarvan. — Specimens
Macrarn^. Stockings. Caps. Socks. Jersey. Mittens.
(45) Dorothea Roberts, 5, Queen’s Gate Place, London, S.W. —
Plain Socks.
(46) Mrs. Gore Cuthbert, Reuss, Blackrock. — Hand Embroidered
Child’s Dress. Boy’s Boating Jersey. Crochet Jacket. Baby’s
Boots. Hand-embroidered Handkerchief (not to be sold).
Muffler, new style, first of the pattern. Travellers Hand-knitted
Helmet (Irsh Wool). Comb and Bmsh Bag, Jubilee design.
Shoes from Achill Island. Macrame Lace.
(47) Countess of Rosse, BIit Castle, Parsonstown. — Knitted Socks.
Variegated Knitted Gloves. Soft Brown Variegated Gloves.
Plain Gloves. Leather-lined Gloves. Children’s Plain Gloves.
(48) Miss Sarah St. John, Deirynasura, Mountrath. — Hair Brooches
Bracelets (hair).
(49) The Sisters of Charity, Asylum for Blind, Merrion. — Child’s
Dress. Knitted Petticoat. Gaiters. Silk Stockings. Lace
Stockings. Socks. Gloves.
(50)
De Vesci Terrace,
Box of Pressed Seaweeds,
(51)
Miss Barrett, 6,
Shamrocks, mounted
Mat, with crest.
Miss Roberts, 5, Queen’s Gate Place. — Helmets
Kingstown. — Cards.
Shamrocks, Ac.
Sailors.
Clerical Socks,
ings,
Mittens.
Gloves.
Socks. Jerseys.
Lambs Wool Socks.
Child’s Under Dress. Children’s Black Stock-
nitted Gloves. Angola Socks. Various Gloves.
Silk Socks. Boy’s Stockings. Child’s Fingerless
Fingering Stockings. Shooting Stockings. Fine
Wheeling Socks. Children’s Stockings.
Angola and Wool.
(52)
Miss Augusta Jani
Knicker Stockings.
Goold, Athea, Glin, Co. Limerick. — Socks.
Hand-knit
Madder Flannel. Bags,
Stockings.
(55)
Mrs. O’Hara, Raheeii, (Jort. — Frieze,
containing Flannel, Ac.
Mrs. T. U. Edgeworth, Ardglass, Rathowen, Edgeworthstown.
— Mantel Borders, painted and designed in oil colours by Mrs.
•Edgeworth, with curtains to match.
Annie H. Preston, St. John’s, Enniscorthy, Co. Wexford. —
Terra Cotta, for faiiy lights to stand in. • Terra Cotta, Guelder
Rose (wild). Terra Cotta Vase, Anemone Japoiiica. Terra Cotta
Water Lily. Terra Cotta Vase, Jasmine (purple). Terra Cotta
table, different shapes for
Ornamental Flower Pots, for dinner
fei'iis to grow in.
(56) Presentation Convent, Killarney.
Flower, on
Appliqu^.
white satin. Quilt,
— Sun Flower Border. Sun
Applicpie Pattern. Border,
IPJSH SECTTOX.
225
1169 PiM Bkos., Limited, South Great Georges-street, Dublin,
Hand-knitted Shooting Stockings, and Gents’ Half Hose, knitted
by the Irish peasantry. Art Crochet Work and Hand Knitting.
Ladies’ Wool Petticoats, Wool Shawls, and Fancy Wool Work. Tiie
designs are supplied by native artists, and all maniihictured in Ireland.
1170 WiLLiA’M Graham, 4, Grafton-street, Dublin
Gentlemen’s Hand-made Silk and Felt Hats. Ladies’ and Youths’
Silk, Velvet, and Tweed Hats and Caps.
1171 Murphy & Orr, 18, Donegall-street, Belfast.
Linen and Silk Damask Table Cloth, Jubilee design. Linen and
Silk Tea Cloths.
1172 The Knitting Factory, Tipperary, Co. Tipperary.
Socks, Stockings, Scarfs, Caps, &c.
1173 Tillie and Henderson, Foyle Factory, Londonderry ;
19, Silver-street, London, E.C. ; and 39, Miller-street,
Glasgow.
White Regatta, Oxford, Wool, and Silk Shirts. Collars.
Ladies’ Underclothing and Baby Linen. Ladies’ Corsets.
1174 J. N. Eichardson, Sons, & Owden, Limited, 1, Donegall
Square, North Belfast.
Fronting and Shirting Linens, medium and fine qualities.
Sheetings. Pillow Linens. Diapers. Lawns. Cambric-bordered and
hem-stitched Handkerchiefs. Scalloped, Hem-stitched, and Embroidered
Handkerchiefs. Pillow Cases. Sheet and Pillow Shams. Sheets,
embroidered and plain. Double Damask Table Cloths and Napkins.
Doylej's and Tray Cloths. Brown, Dyed, and Finished Linens.
Hollands. Glass Cloths and Towels.
1175 Caledon Woollen Co., Caledon, Co. Tyrone, Ireland.
Irish Tweeds, Friezes, Blankets, Rugs, Serges, Costume Cloths.
1176 Martin Mahon y & Bros., Limited, 3, Camden Quay,
Cork, and Blarney Factory.
Blarney and Shamrock Fingerings. Fleecy Wools. Knitting
Worsteds and Yarns.
1177 Martin Mahony & Bros., Limited, 3, Camden Quay,
Cork, and Blarney Factory.
Blarney Tweeds manufactured, from Australian Home Wools.
Tuskar Boating Serges, and Worsted Coatings.
1178 William Barbour & Sons Limited, Hilden Flax
Mills, Lisburn, Ireland.
Linen Threads, in hanks, balls, and on spools. Shoe Thread
in balls. Linen Yarns. Hemp Yarns. Twines for fish lines, net
making, seaming, roping, &c.
226
IRISH SECTION.
1179 PiM Brothers & Co., 22, William-street, Dublin; and
3 and 4, Milk-street, London, E.C.
Silk Poplins for Ladies’ Dresses. Silk Handkerchiefs. Brocaded
Silk Terries for furniture purposes.
1180 O’Beilly, Dunne, & Co., 30, College Green, Dublin.
Irish Poplin, black and coloured. Empress Poplin. Imperial
Fine Poplin. Brocaded Poplin. Double Poplin. Demie Poplin.
Single Poplin. Irish Black Silk.
1181 O’Reilly, Dunne, k Co., 30, College Green, Dublin.
The Manufacture of Brocaded Poplin, Jubilee Pattern.
1182 Robert Usher & Co., Greenhills Factory, Drogheda.
Linen Goods.
1183 The Island Spinning Co., Limited, Island Mills
Lisburn, Ireland.
Flax in various states. Flax yarns : 2 and .3 Fold Flax Yarns.
Linen Threads, Carpet Threads, Jacquard Threads, Wax Machine
Threads, Threads for Sole-sewing EMachines, 6-cord Cable-laid
Threads, for heavy leather work, Macrame Lace and Macrame Lace
Threads, Gilling and Fishing Threads. A Polling Fishing Net.
1184 Frankland-street Collar Co., Limited, 2, Great
Victoria-street, Belfast.
Ladies’ and Boys’ Linen Collars and Cuffs. Holland Pinafores.
Diaper Pinafores. Holland Aprons. Fancy Dress Aprons,
1185 WoLFHiLL Flax Spinning Co., Limited, Ligoniel,
Belfast.
Different Processes in connection with the Spinning of Linen
Yarns, such as rough flax, dressed line rove, sheeting yarns, thread
yarns, hue and coarse lines. Dyed yarns, bleached and boiled, and
creamed yarns.
1186 Irish Lace Depot, Ben Lindsey, 76, Grafton-street,
Dublin.
Specimen of Irish Lace, described by the trade designation with
the name of district or town where made, and the name of workers
attached.
1187 Forrest & Sons, 100 and 101, Grafton-street, Dublin,
and 34, Pat rick-street, Cork.
Irish Point, Limerick, Innishruacsaint, Crochet, and Carrick-
macross Lace Flounces, Trimming Laces, Fichus, Lappets, Hand-
kerchiefs, Fan Covers, Ac. Irish Poplin Dress trimmed with Carrick-
macross Guipure Lace. Irish Poplin Tea Gown, trimmed with
Garrick macross Applique Lace, Infant’s Robe of Carrickmacross
Guipure Lace. Infant’s Dress of Carrickmacross Guipure Lace.
IRISH SECTION.
227
1188 Ulster Linen Trade Exhibit, under the Auspices
of the Belfast Linen Merchants’ Association, Belfast,
Ireland.
The contents of this case represents the Linen Trade of
Ulster, and are supplied by the various firms connected with
the industry scattered over the province. There are here
shown the entire and various processes through which the flax
passes from the seed to the ready-made articles of clothing.
Flax Seed. Flax in the raw state, and in various stages of
spinning. Flax Yarns, grey, bleached, and dyed. Flax Threads,
suitable for shoemaking, tailoring, bookbinding, and other purposes.
Textiles made from flax, including grey, dyed, printed, bleached, and
figured linens and unions : Rough Browns, Hollands, Buckrams, Coat
Paddings, Canvases, Drills, Dowlas, Roller Towellings, Huckaback,
Glass Cloths, Grey and Bleach Towels, Diapers, Table Damasks,
Damask Towels, Sheetings, Pillow Linens, Curtains, Turniture
Coverings, Carriage Rugs. Shirting and Family Linens, Shirts,
Collars, Cuffs, White, Printed, and Embroidered Pocket Hand-
kerchiefs, Aprons, Pinafores. Brown, Dyed, and Printed Dress
Goods. Printed Shirtings.
1189 The Belfast Ropework Co., Limited, Connswater,
Belfast,
Ropes for Transmitting Power, Hoists, Ships’ Running Gear,
Block Ropes. Cords for Reins, in hemps, Italian, and flax. Cords
for Window Sashes, plaited and hand-made, in hemp, Italian, and
flax, of assorted sizes. Twines, of flax, Italian, and hemp, for general
use.
1190 Belfast Hemstitching Co., Limited, Hope-street,
Belfast.
Hemstitching and Hemstitching Machines.
1191 F. AND I. Clayton, Navan, Co. Meath.
Worsted Coatings. Meltons and Beavers. Broad Cloth and
Pilots. Saxony and Cheviot Tweeds. Friezes and I’laids. Blankets
and Flannels. Gladstone Rugs. Ladies’ All-wool Dress Goods.
Fingerings and Knitting Yarns. Skin Hearth Rugs and Mats.
1192 The Most Noble the Marquis of Waterford
(manager, William Abbott), Woollen Mills, Kilmac-
thomas, Co. Waterford.
Woollen Goods. Tweeds. Horse Clothing.
1193 Great Southern and Western Railway Co.,
Inchicore, Dublin.
Locking Frame of 28 levers, for working railway points and
signals. Two-armed Bracketed Signal. One-armed Single Signal.
Ground Disc Signal.
228
IRISH SECTION.
1194 William Henry Elliott, Railway Cottage, Thurles,
Co. Tipperary.
Model Set of Railway Rails. Set of Points, worked and inter-
locked by Elliott’s patents. Model of Two-armed Bracketed Signal
Points and signals, worked by a three-lever locking frame. ^lodel of
a Single Signal, in cast-iron. Model of a Single Signal, in wood, fitted
with an appliance for working the arm, the wires working the same
not requiring any adjustment. Model of a Two-armed Slotted Signal.
Model of a Ten-lever Locking Frame. Models of Electric Appliances
for Repeating the Actions of Points and Signals.
1195 Michael Elliott, Bridge End, Mallow, Co. Cork.'
Model of Apparatus for Compensating the Expansion and
Contraction of Wires.
1196 W. Curtis & Sons, 98 and 99, Abbey-street, Dublin.
Set of Double-flanged Cocks and Lock Levers for breweries
and distilleries. Tray for brewers’ cleansing vessel, with three 5in.
cocks for starting, turning, and washing combined. Improved
Smith’s Patent Racking Apparatus, with check valve on air pipe.
Beer Engine Fittings. Beer and Spirit Taps. Fire Brigade Standpipe
and Fittings. Sight Lubricator and Oil Syphons. Plumbers’ Brass
Work. Ordinary Plug and High-pressure Hot and Cold Water Taps.
Six-wick Dioptic Lighthoiise Burner. Railway Lamps. Five-light
Gas Standard, nickel plated. Ornamental Gas Bar for shop window.
Polished Brass Communion Rail and Church Brass Work. Railway
Carriage Furniture, 6lc.
1197 Philip Pierce & Co., Mill-road Iron Works, Wexford,
Ireland.
Patent Orion Grass Mower, width of cut 4ft. Sin. Patent Steel
19-tooth Tumbler Rake, with alternate teetli removable for
changing into Rake or Gatherer. Patent Single Drill Turnip and
Mangold Seed Sower.
1198 J. Edmundson & Co., Limited, 33 to 36, Capel-
street, Dublin; 19, Great George-street, Westminster.
Wigham’s Patent Double Quadriform Lighthouse Gas Light,
having an illuminating surface of about 16ft. by 8ft. Wigham’s
Patent Royal Atmospheric Gas Machine, for making gas without fire ;
100 lights; entirely Irish manufacture. Model to Scale of Galley
Head Lighthouse Lantern, Wigham’s quadriform gas light. Model
to Scale of Mew Island Lighthouse Lantern, Wigham’s triform gas
light. Model to Scale of Tuskar Lighthouse Lantern, biform oil
light, manufactured in Ireland and erected by J. Edmundson A Co.
Model of Lantern to contain Wigham’s double quadriform gas light.
Revolving Harbour Light, red and white. First Order Lighthouse
Oil Lamp, Wigham’s patent air system, recjuiring no glass chimney.
Sundry Lighthouse Burners.
1199 The Mayo Granite Company, Blacksod Bay, Belmulett,
Co. Mayo; 51, King-street, and 22, Booth-street,
Manchester.
Polished Granite Columns, 10ft., 15 in. by 15in. with plinth and
moulded base. Ditto, 5ft., 21 in. by 21 in. Ditto, Pilasters, 7ft.,
15in. by Gin. Part polished Step, 6ft, 18in. by Gin. Landing,
8ft. by 3ft. Gin. Granite Curbing, Crossings, Paving Sets, and
Ashlar Walling, part polished.
1200 Irish Section Committee, Eoyal Dublin . Society,
Kildare-street, Dublin.
A General Collection of Irish Marbles, Building Stones, Ores, Ac.
1201 William John Hynes, Woodmount, Ballinasloe; and
28, Elgin-road, Dublin.
Columns of Marble from Creagh Quarry, Ballinasloe, Co.
Roscommon.
1202 John Miller & Son, Marble and Granite Works,
Galway.
Irish Marbles. Polished Galway Granites and Galway Marbles.
1203 William Smith, 1, Cly de-road, Dublin.
Waterproof Cement, in blocks, slabs, bricks, tiles, and pipes.
1204 Charles William Harrison, 178, Great Brunswick-
street, Dublin.
A Caen Stone Figure, “ The Virgin and Child,” and a Celtic
Cross in Lish limestone.
1205 H. SiBTHORPE & Son, 33, Molesworth-street, Dublin.
Irish Marbles. Slab, Galway Black (Merlin Park Quarry),
12ft. by 6ft. Ditto, Little Island (red). Block, Lissoughter (green).
Ditto, Midleton (grey and pink). Ditto, Moneen (dark grey). Ditto,
Clonowen (grey fossil). Bust Pedestals. Piece of Altar Rail and
Step. Sundry Columns of above Marbles. Choice pieces of Lis-
soughter green.
1206 Victoria Slate Co., Limited, Victoria Slate Quarries,
Carrick-on-Suir ; and 11, South Frederick-street,
Dublin.
Slate Block cut with mallet ready for Splitter. Block sawn
at each end and ready for Splitter. Block after passing through
the Splitter’s hands and ready for Dresser. Dressed and
Finished Slates. Specimen Roof.
1207 Benduff and Froe Slate Co., Limited, Kosscarbery,
Co. Cork, Ireland.
12 Rooting Slates, Queens, Princesses, and Duchesses.
230
HUSH SECTION,
1208 The Eglinton Chemical Co., Limited, 27, St. A inceiit
Place, Glasgow.
Model of Devilish Kouiid Tower in paving sets. Model of
Chant’s Causeway Chair. Irish Limestone. Irish Limeshells.
Whiting. Paving Sets. Irish Bauxite (Alum Clay). Irish Flints.
1209 & 1212 The Great Southern and Western Railway
Co., Locomotive AVorks, Inchicore, Dublin.
Express Passenger Engine and Tender, built by the G.S.^^ .B. Co.
Engine : Four coupled wheels, 6ft. Gin. diameter j cylinders,
18in. X 21in. ; heating surface, 1,050ft.; grate area, 18|ft. ; steam
pressure, IGOlbs., fitted with vacuum brake ; working weight, 39 tons
4cwt. ; gauge of road, 5ft. 3in. Tender: Tank, 2,700 gals. ; 'sleight,
loaded, 28 tons 6cwt. With the engine is shown a pair of cylinders,
with air passages for vacuum brake, front covers, Ac., cast in. Photos
of rolling stock, and specimens of work.
1210 Daniel Miller & Co., 29, Church- street, Dublin.
Selection of Copper and Brass Work for breweries, distilleries,
Ac. Hot Water Boilers and Cylinders for domestic purposes.
1211 Belfast Electric Appliances Co., Limited, Clarence-
street, Belfast.
Arc Light Carbons. Arc Lamps.
1213 Wilson Brothers, Shannon Saw Alills, Athlone.
Bobbins used in the Manufacture of Wool, Flax, Cotton, and
other fabrics ; also specimens of Irish Timber for Coach Building,
Tool Handles, Brushes, and other purposes.
1214 Benjamin AA^atson, 6 and 7, Robert-street, Cork.
Pair of Ornamental Wrought-iron Avenue Entrance Gates, lift.
6in bv 8ft. high. Ornamental Wrought-iron Communion Standard.
Ornamental Wrought-iron Choir Screen, or Chancel Screen Panel.
Ornamental Wrouglit-iron Panel for inserting into timber entrance
gates, or suitable for glass porch entrance ; also for chancel or chon
screen. Portion of Wrought-iron Cross for church spiie.
1215 Waltek Carson & Sons, 21 and 22, Bachelor’s Walk,
Dublin.
Hanlon Speedy Plough for ploughing in the style of the
American Digging Plough.
1216 Thomas Grendon & Co., Drogheda Iron AVorks,
Drogheda.
Locomotive Cylinders, castings and finished. Horizontal
Pumping Engine. Brass Pump. Cast-iron Slotted Dram Plates.
Ship Models.
Limited, Ann-street Iron Works,
Bond-street, London; 240, Bue de
Musgrave’s Patent Fittings for Stalls and Loose Boxes.
Mnsgrave’s Patent Fittings for Harness and Saddle Rooms. Model of
Stable fitted with Miisgrave& Co.’s Safety Fittings. Miisgrave’s Patent
Slo^^ -combustion Ulster Stoves for warming halls, churches, schools,
ifec. Musgrave’s Patent Ventilating Air-warmer. iMusgrave’s Patent
Hot-water Apparatus, Hot-water Coils, and Coil Cases. Musgrave’s
Patent Piggery Fittings. Specimen of Architectural Wrought-iron
Work
1219
Geo. Fras.
Professor of
Dublin.
FitzGerald,
Experimental
M.A., F.R.S., F.T.C.D.,
Science, Trinity College,
Apparatus for Exhibiting Conical Refraction, designed by the late
Dr. Lloyd. Saccharimeter, by Dr. Jellett, Provost of Trinity College.
Model illustrating Electro-magnetic and Luminiferous Properties of
the Ether, Sine, and Tangent Galvanometer, Lecture Balance, Ac.,
by Professor FitzGerald. Steam Calorimeters, Biprisni Photometer.
Meldometer, to measure melting points of minerals. Modified
Nicholson’s Hydro metric Balance, apparatus for recording observa-
tions at a distance, Ac., by J. Joly, B.A., Assistant to Professor of
Engineering.
1220 James Mackie & Son, Albert Foundry, Albert-street,
Belfast.
Samples of Spindles and Flyers used in flax, tow, and jute
spinning. Brass Retaining and Delivery Rolls used in same
manufactures.
1221 Yeates & Son, 2, Grafton -street, Dublin.
Optical Bench. Electrical Registering Rain Gauge. Patent
Dumpy Level for Surveyors. Improved Heliostat. Standard
Measure. Electrical Rheostat, with improved springs and stops.
Small Equatorial Telescope.
1221 Bessbrook Granite Co., Limited, Bessbrook, Ireland.
Polished Granites in form of Building Work, Polished Columns,
Cocoa and Paint Grinding Rollers, Tramway Paving, Street Kerbing,
Monuments, Obelisks, Crosses, Ac.
1222 The Dublin United Tramway Co., 31, Great Sack-
ville-street, Dublin.
Tram Car, built at The Dublin United Tramway Company’s
Works, Inchicore, Dublin.
232
IRISH SECTION.
1223 Hugh Campbell k Sox, Ne\vry Granite Polishing
•Works, Moor Quarries, NeMuy, Ireland.
Column ^lommient, Irish Cross Monument, Set of Grave
Borders.
1225 Dublin Prepared Peat Litter Co., 24, Eden May,
Dublin.
Specimen Bales of Irish Peat Moss Litter. Samples for packing
and deodorising purposes.
1226 Chancellor & Son, 55, Lower Sackville-street, Dublin.
Large Turret Clock, on bed-plate system, measuring 5ft. by 3ft.,
\vith 15in. main wheels, teeth cut from solid, adapted for shoving
time on four dials 8ft. each, and arranged with cams for lifting
hammers striking on two bells weighing about lOcwt. and 6cwt., with
dead-beat remontoire escapement, maintaining power, and second-and-
a-half pendulum. Turret Clock, on bed-plate system, adapted to show
time on one or two dials up to 4ft. in diameter, striking the hours and
(piarters, fitted with Graham’s dead-beat escapement, and full seconds
pendulum.
1227 Walter' Wood, 13, Delahay-street, Westminster,
London.
Copper Ore, from Bantry and Kilerhaiie, Silver Ore from
Lesheaanig, Bantry.
1228 & 1235 Loss and Walpole, North Wall Iron Works,
Dublin.
Geoghegan’s Patent Tip Wagon for 1ft. lOin. yauge, cubic
capacity 3 yards. Casting of Locomotive Cylinder. Two C}4mders
ill one Casting, to bore to 18in. Cast-iron Slotted Plate for Hop
Jack in brewery. Perforated Plate for Mash Kiln in distillery.
1229 William Spence, Cork-street Foundry and Engineering
Works, Dublin.
Shunting Locomotive Engine for Narrow-gauge Railways or
Tramways, S. Geoghegan’s patent. The chief diniensmns, Ac., M Hie
engine are — diameter of cylinders Tin., stroke of piston b^iii.,
diameter of wheels 1ft. lOin., wheel base 3ft. Boiler— diameter
of barrel (inside) l>ft. 5in., number of tubes 64, diameter o tubes
(outside) Uin., length of tubes between tube plates 2ft. U)«-m.,
heating surface, firebox 13-75 sq. ft., tubes 72-61 sq. ft., total
heating surface 86-36 sq. ft., pressure of steam LSOlu., total weiglit
7 tons 15 cwt., ijower eilnal to a load of 120 ton-s at 10 miles an hour,
or a load of 25 tons up a gradient of 1 in 40. Set of Three-throw
Pumps, brass barrels, stroke 21in. by bin. diameter, capable ot
discharging 15,000 gallons per hour. Bung Cutting Machine, capable
of turning out 700 bungs per hour. Branding Machine for casks,
packing cases, Ac.
IRISH SECTION,
233
1230 John Orr Wallace, 18, Waring-street, Belfast.
Machine for breaking, scutching, and cleaning flax and other
fibres.
19 and 21, Queen’s-square, Belfast.
Roofino- Felt. Sarking Felt, Ship Sheather’s Felt.
1231 John Eogers,
Felt Roof.
Inodorous Felt. Felt Varnish. Coloured Varnish for Felt Roofs.
Wire Work (various). Wire Gauge. Extra Strong Wire Cloth.
Wire Window Guards for shop fronts. Antifriction Grease. Cog-
wheel Grease.
1232 Matthew Byrne, 42, James s-street,. Dublin.
Three Bells, with mountings and frame to support them.
1233 William A. Traill, C.E., Giants’ Causeway Electric
Tramway, Portrush, Co. Antrim.
Model of an Overhead Electric Railway for the Mersey Docks
at Liverpool, with a Working Model Electric Car.
1234 Howard Grubb, F.R.S., Rathmines, Dublin.
Semi-portable Iron and Wood Observatory, with revolving dome,
15ft. diameter, and covered with papier-mache; transit room, with
now transit shutter; photographic room, ttc. New form of Twin
Equatorial Telescope, as constructed for the observatory of Dr. W
Huggins, F.R.S., London, and that of Mr. J. Roberts, F.R.A.S., Liver-
pool, carrying an Sin. refractor for general star-gazing and micro-
metrical work, and a 17in. reflector, especiall}^ fitted for Stellar
photography, furnished with all recent improvements, electrically-
centralled clock, electric illumination for circles, verniers, &c., the
reflecting telescopes having independent motion in declination. 5in
Refracting Telescope, mounted on a new form of equatorial, in which
all clamps are dispensed with, fitted with electric illumination and
readers reading all circles from eye-end of telescope. 4 in. Binocular
Telescope new form of instrument. Binocular telescopes are usually
limited in size by distance between the human eyes ; by this arrange-
ment any size telescope can be used as binoculars. 4in. Astronomical
Telescope, mounted on siderostatic, or lazy principle, b}^ means of which
the advantages of an equatorial mounting are obtained while the eye-
piece of the telescope is available to observers inside any ordinaiy
sitting-room ; the arrangement of this instrument for adaptation to
any ordinary south window is shown in accompanying model. 3in. Re-
fracting Telescope on Student’s Equatorial. Glass case containing
Model of Great Vienna Equatorial, scale -jV. Glass case containing
Design i\Iodel for Lick Observatory, California ; all the motions
worked by electricity. The essential features of this design have
been adopted by the trustees. Glass case containing various Speci-
mens of Apparatus manufactured at Mr. Howard Grubb’s works.
Grubb’s Patent Microscope. Solar Spectroscope, G of catalogue
Stellar Spectroscope, H of catalogue, made for Professor Young, of
United States, and various home observatories. Level Tester on
IRISH SECTION.
Optical Plane. Unifilar Micrometer and Electric Illumination for
same. Wedge Photometer. Sets of Negative and Positive Eye-
pieces. Transit Eyepiece. First Surface Reflecting Solar Eye-
piece. Combined Polarizing and Dawe’s Solar Eye-piece. Total
Reflecting Eye-piece for Zenith Stars. Combined First Surface Re-
flecting and Zenith Eyepiece. Brnflow Lens. Dr. Stoney’s Collimator
for Adjusting Reflecting Telescopes. Set of Object Lenses, showing
the various stages of the grinding and polishing processes. Set of
Grubb’s Patent Photo Lenses. Sets of Double and Triple Condensing
Lantern Lenses. Various sizes of Simple and Compound Prisms for
spectroscopic work. Variable Prisms. Large Half-compound Prism,
intended for spectroscope similar to that lately made for Dr. Crookes,
F.R.S. Large Totally Reflecting Prism. Electric Switches. Rheostats,
Ac., for telescope attachments. Model of Cylindroid. Machine
for Calculating Curves of Telescope and other Lenses. Various
Framed Photographs and Engravings of Instruments and Observa-
tories erected by Mr. Howard Grubb.
1236 Daniel Harris & Son, Cliaiiemont Bridge Works,
Dublin.
Full-sized Billiard Table, mahogany frame, slate bed, patent
cold-resisting cushions, and improved adjustment girders.
1237 Thos. Pearson & Co., 11 to 16, Ship-street, Dublin.
Brass, Copper, and Iron Wire Webs. Woven Wire Mattresses.
Hospital Bed. Millstone for grinding cement or coporolites.
1238 J. Doyle & Sons, 15, Queen-street, Dublin.
Irish Outside Car, with movable underwell, ladies’ backrests
and footstool, coachman’s driving seat, Warner patent wheels, and
Collinge’s patent axle.
1239 Isaac J. Murphy, Armagh, Ireland.
Machine for the tri-section of an angle or arc of a circle.
Machine for the division of angles or arcs of circles into integral
fractional parts.
1240 Bewley, Webb, & Co., Port of Dublin Shipyard,
l^orth Wall, Dublin.
Models of Steamers. Kneading Machine. Machine for Dividing
Dough.
1241 Maguire & Son, Dublin Sanitary and Engineering
Works, 6, 7, and 8, South Frederick-street ; office,
10, Dawson-street, Dublin.
Dr. Scott’s Patent Disinfecting Chamber, with gas regulators
and double doors. Set of Maguire’s Ventilating Extractors. Speci-
mens of Wrought-iron Brackets, Ac. Irisli Marble Mantelpiece with
Hearth and Kerb. Specimens of Mrs. Huyghenbotham’s Silk and
Lace Lamp Shades. Specimens of Irish Marbles. Specimens of
various Irish Manufactures.
4 ^
IRISH SECTION.
235
1242 J. Edmundson & Co., Limited, 33 to 36, Capel-
street, Dublin; and 19, Great George-street, West-
minster.
Suite of Bedroom Furniture, consisting of wardrobe, dressing
table, washstand, pedestal, towel rail, and three chairs. The design
is from the antique ; the suite is composed entirely of Irish poplar,
veneered on Irish ash. Toilet Set.
1243 H. E. Phillipson, 30, Stafford-street, Dublin.
Inlaid White Marble Mantelpiece, in Bossi style. Period about
A.D. 1750, in Dublin. Inlaid White Marble Half-round Table ;
frame in enamelled woods, Bossi. Period about a.d. 1750, in
Dublin. Inlaid White Marble Altar Tablet.
1244 PiM Brothers, Limited, South Great Georges-street,
Dublin.
Suite of Drawing-room Furniture, walnut inlaid, covered in
Irish figured poplin ; curtains to match. Suite of Dining-room Fur-
niture in walnut. Suite of Bedroom Furniture, in walnut, carved
panels, hand painted tile.
1245 John Power & Son, Jobn’s-lane Distillery, Dublin.
Float to carry 6 hogsheads, will draw 3 tons. Framework of
body Irish oak and ash, bottom sheeting Irish elm, mounted on
2Jii]. crank, taper arm axle. Built by J. C. Mahon, 5, Summer Hill,
Dublin.
1246 John Hutton & Sons, 115, Summer Hill, Dublin.
Sociable, on C and undersprings. Irish Car, with movable well.
1247 T. CoGHLAN, 40, Lower Camden -street, Dublin.
Full-size Billiard Table, slate bed, mounted on massive frame,
made of Pollard oak, with automatic screw adjustments, and appoint-
ments.
1248 Lawson’s Patent Adhesive Capsule Co. (James G.
Macintyre, sec.), 61, William-street, Dublin.
Capsules made of Paper, put on in two pieces.
1249 Michael Power, 9, Summer Hill Parade, Dublin.
Inlaid Marble Table Top. (Artisan exhibitor.)
1250 S. Wilson & Co., 19, Corporation Square, Belfast,
Ireland.
Tennis Tent without centre pole. Model of Ballroom Marquee.
Tennis Tent and Decoration Poles. Patent North Tennis Poles.
1251 Edward J. Keane, 21, Upper Cross-roads, South
Circular-road, Dublin.
Three Violins. (Artisan exhibitor.)
236
IRISH SECTION.
1251 Benjamin Davis, 8, St. Alban’s-road, South Circular-
road, Dublin.
A Banjo. (Artisan exhibitor.)
1251 Francis Holden, 42, Lower Dominick-street, Dublin.
Panel Modelled in Plaster, Wild Boar Hunt. Ditto, Renais-
sance st}de. Do., Roses. Panel in Marble, low relief Flowers-
(Artisan exhibitor. )
1252 James Dillon, C.E., M.I.C.E, Stratford, Glengeary,
Co. Dublin.
Dillon’s Patent Automatic Sounding Machine and Tide Recorder.
From an inspection of the diagrams Nos. 1, 2, and 3, and model jo
this invention, it will be seen tliat it consists of a sounding bar or
tube, or weighted sounding wire, working dial-hands or pencil-pointers
on rolls of section paper, recording automatically the varying depths
of ground under water, or the amount of dredging or river excava-
tion during progress of works, Ac. It will also indicate by semaphore
signal or diagrams, on rolls of paper, on Section board of ship or man-
of-war, the rise or fall of ground under ship’s bottom when navigating
dangerous waters. This is effected by the varying angle of the
sounding tube resting on the ground under water. From an exami-
nation of diagram 3, it will be seen how the instrument can be made
to automatically record and telegraph to a distant town the rate of
consumption or the rise or fall of reservoir waters for the supply of
towns.
1252 James Dillon, 36, Dawson-street, Dublin.
Dillon’s Patent Marine Surveying and Automatic Sounding
Machine and Tide Recorder.
1253 Andrew Cameron Brunton, New Mills, Mountmellick,
Queen’s County.
A Tweed Designer’s Idea, or Trial Loom, and specimens of
designs.
1254 John Murphy, 14, Thomas-street, Dublin.
Bell, weight 27cwt. 3qr., note D natural. 4in. Gland Cock.
5in. Wheel Sluice Valve. Gongs. Copper Piece.
1255 The Belleek Pottery Co., Limited, Belleek, Co.
F ermanagh , Ireland.
Parian Statuary and Ornamental Goods, General Earthenware,
and Sanitary Ware.
1256 Samuel Matthews, Dufour Court, South Brown-street,
. Dublin.
Fancy Leather, morocco, roan and skiver, flat call.
1257 David Wightman, 8, Castle-street, Belfast.
Irish Bog Oak Jewellery — Bracelets, Brooches, Earrings, Crosses,
and Pendants — mounted in silver and gold.
1258 Kate Nolan, 37, Donnybrook, Co. Dublin, and 84,
Bathmore Terrace, Cork.
Machine for making Hair Jewellery. Bouquet of Flowers made of
Human Hair. Ear-rings, Finger-rings, Bracelets, Albert and Guard
Chains, made of Human Hair.
1259 Knaggs Beothers, 27, Grafton-street, Dublin.
Model Irish Jaunting Car. Silver-mounted Tankard, Legend of
St. Hubert. Silver-mounted Salvers, in Celtic work of 12th century.
Salad Bowl in form of National Lifeboat. Claret Jugs, &c. Old
Irish Jewellery, gold and 'silver mounted. Bog Oak Boxes, inlaid
with Connemara marble. Art Specimens in Irish and Manchester
coal. The Fisher Boy. Medallion. Rubens.
1260 William E. Box & Co., 105, Middle Abbey-street,
Dublin.
Harness Mountings in Brass, Silver, German Silver, and Silver-
stein. Hames, Bits, Stirrups, Spurs, and other polished work. Crests,
Monograms, and State and Civic Coats of Arms. Tramcar Fittings,
Bells, Carriage Door Handles, Cab Fittings and Requisites in Brass,
Silver, German Silver, and Silverstein, for the Coach-building and
Harness-makers’ Trades. Box’s Patent Safety Saddle Bar.
1261 John McDonnel & Co., Limited (John Gird wood
Drury, Managing Director), 8, Lower Ormond Quay,
Dublin; mills, Swiftbrook Mills, Saggart, Co. Dublin ;
No. 41 Mil].
Fine and Superfine Cream Laid and Wove Writing Papers.
Antique or Vellum Writing Paper. Blue Writing Paper. Extra
strong S.B.M. Azure Laid Account Book Papers. Samples of the
materials used in the manufacture of the above papers in various
stages of manufacture.
12f‘)2 William Hegarty & Sons, 380, Blarney-street, Cork.
Monster Satin, Satin Calf, Sides and Shoulders Memel, Waxed,
Russett, and Kid Calf, Levant Hides, Shoulders and Goat, Horse Crupp
and Horse Kid, Kip Butts.
1263 E. Laird, 58, Grafton-street, Dublin.
Irish Point Lace Fan, mounted in tortoise-shell, and gold and
silver shamrocks. Limerick Lace Fan, and Bog Oak, Satin, and Bog-
Oak Fan, hand painted. Carrickmacross Lace and Tortoise-shell
Fan. Irish Black Silk Lace and Ivory Fan. Black Satin Fan,
painted with Irish views. Limerick Lace Fan, mounted on white
satin. Bog Oak and Feather Fan.
1264 D. Anderson & Son, Limited, Lagan Felt Works,
Belfast.
^lodel of AVooden Lattice Girder Felted Roof. Alodel of Buildiii",
showing methods of using Felt and Silicate Cotton (or Slag AVool),
for
lining,
deafening, and non-conducting purposes, and Felted
Asphalte for preventing damp rising in walls. Alodel showing method
of using Silicate Cloth, for covering boilers and steam and water
pipes. Roofing, Sarking, Sheathing, Lining, and Dry Hair Felts, and
Felted Asphalte or Foundation Felt. Silicate Cotton (or Slag \Vool)
and Non-conducting Silicate Cloth.
1265 B. & F. Keane, Iron and Brass Founders and Makers
of Agricultural Machines, The Foundry, Cappoquin,
Co. Waterford.
Enclosed-gear Two-horse Mower complete. Steel Tooth Tumbling
Rake and Hay Gatherer.
1266 Jameson, Pm, & Co., North Anne-street Brewery,
Dublin.
Invalids’ Imperial Stout, Extra Stout and Porter.
1267 Sweet A iAN & Co., Francis Court Brewery, Dublin.
Stout and Porter.
1268 John Plunkett & Co., Portland-street West, Dublin.
Irish Barley, used for malting purposes. Pale Alalt, for brewing
ales and porter. Patent Roasted Malt, Patent Chocolate Malt,
and Patent Roasted Alaize, for colouring and flavouring porter and
stout. Amber Malt, for colouring and flavouring ales and porter.
Crystal Alalt, for colouring and flavouring ales and porter, and for
giving a nut-brown head to porters and stouts.
1269 The Glen Distillery Co.; Distillery, Kilnap Glen;
city office, 1, CaiToll’s Quay, Cork.
Specimens of AA^'hisky of different ages.
Robert A. Taylor, The Distillery, Coleraine, Ireland.
Coleraine Pot Still Alalt AAliisky.
T. P. B. Goodbody, Greenville, South Circular-road,
Dublin.
Irish Rolls, and Fancy Rolls of all classes. Funcy Pressed
Tobaccos. Cut Tobaccos of all descriptions. Cigarettes and Cigars.
John Power & Son, John’s-lane Distillery, Dublin.
Dublin Pot Still AA'hisky.
Girdwood’s Patent AstHxAIA Beaiedy, Donegall Square
North, Belfast.
J. McCarthy & Sons, Cook-street, Cork.
Irish Whisky.
Allman & Co.,. Distillery, Bandon, Cork.
Samples of Whisky. Model Still and Worm. Casks and Cases.
The Bushmills Old Distillery Co., Limited,
Distillery, Bushmills Co. Antrim ; offices, 1, Hill-street,
Belfast.
Malt Whisky in cask and bottle.
1277 Cantrell and Cochrane, Dublin, Belfast, Glasgow,
and London.
Ginger Ale (Aromatic), Club Soda, Lemonade, Sparkling
Montserrat, Royal Seltzer Water, Potass Water, Lithia Water,
Koh-i-noor, Lime Juice Syrup, Orange Bitters.
1278 W. J. Jury, 11, Chichester-street, Belfast; 1 & 2,
Princes-street, Dublin; 181, Fleet-street, London, E.C.
Irish Whiskies. Nucta Bitters, &c.
1279 Alex. Crawford & Son, 20, Mill-street, Belfast.
Amylaceous Food. Starches.
1280 W. A. Boss & Co., Royal Belfast Ginger Ale and
Aerated Water Works, Belfast, Ireland.
Ginger Ale, Lemonade, Sarsaparilla, Soda Water, Potash Water,
Seltzer Water, Lime Juice Cordial, Pure Lime Juice, Raspberry
Vinegar.
1281 Bewley and Draper, Limited, Mary-street, Dublin.
Ginger Ale, Lemonade, Ginger Beer, Soda Water, Seltzer Water,
Potash Water, Lithia Water, Ginger Wine, Orange Wine, Orange
Bitters, Orange and Quinine Wine, Cherry Brandy, Lime Juice
Syrup, Ginger Cordial, Peppermint Cordial. Writing Ink, Coy ping
Ink. Perfumes, Tooth Powders, Tooth Paste, Hair Oils and Pomades,
Toilet Creams and Shaving Paste.
1282 Plunkett Brothers, Belle Yue Malt Factory, Dublin
Glass Case, in form of Malthouse, containing various samples
and descriptions of Patent Roasted Malts, Candied Malts, Pale Malts,
and Brown Malts.
1283 Harrington Brothers, Shandon Chemical Works,
Cork.
Oxides for Glass, Porcelain, and Enamel Industries. Cobalt,
Nickel, Copper, Tin, and other oxides. Tungsten Metal and Salts,
Stiumate of Soda, Antimony Oxalate, Phosphorus, Penta- and Tri-
Chlorides, Antimony Sulphuret (golden), &c. Acids : Acetic (anhy-
240
IRISH SECTION.
droiis), Hippuric, Monochloracetic, Succinic, (fee. Acid Molybdic,
Ammonia Molybdate, Soda Carb. puriss. anhydrous. Zinc puriss., cfec.
Magnesia Carbonate, Calcined, <fec.. Lithium Carbonate, (fee.
1284 Richard Hartland, The Lough Nurseries, Cork.
Sections of Irish-gi’OAvn Woods. Cones gathered from Imported
Trees now growing in Ireland. Varieties of Tree Seeds.
1285 The Drogheda Chemical Manure Co., Drogheda.
Superphosphate. Bone Manure. Corn and Grass Manure.
Special Root Manure. Special ^Manure. Dissolved Bones. Curaco
Phosphate. Canadian Phospliate. Estramadura Phosphate. Cana-
dian Phosphate. Bull River Phosphate. Cambridge Coprolite.
Spanish Pyrites. Crushed Bones. Bone Meal. Kainit. Sulphate
of Ammonia. Fish Guano. Sulphate of Potash. Dried Blood.
1286 McMaster, Hodgson, & Co., 121 and 122, Capel-
street, Dublin.
Danish Butter Colour. Sweet Essence of Reunett. Hair Re-
storer.
1287 Nicholas Devereaux & Co., Bishops water Distillery,
Wexford.
Whisky in Bottle.
1288, 1289, and 1295 Thomas Jennings, Biwn-street, Cork.
Light Carbonate of Magnesia in powder, and in blocks of various
sizes. Light Calcined Magnesia. Ponderous Carbonate and Calcined
Magnesia. Fluid Magnesia. White Wine, crystal and brown. Table
and Pickling Vinegars. Spiced, Chili, Tarragon, and Raspberry
Vinegars.
1290 Alexander Finlay, 35, Ann-street, Belfast, Ireland.
Soaps, Hard and Soft. Candles, Wax, Sperm, Paraffin, Composite,
and Tallow. Raw Material from which these are manufactured.
1291 Deans, Hadden, & Co., 16, Commercial Court, and 28,
Hill-street, Belfast.
Gingerette. Green Ginger Wine. Quinine Wine. Pine Apple
Wine. Lime Juice Syrup. Macronc Cordial. Clove Cordial. Lime
Fruit Cordial. Cinnamon Cordial. Peppermint Cordial. Raspberry
Liqueur. Ulster Licpieur (registered). Raspberry Vinegar. Orange
Tonic Bitters.
1*292 Fred. Lewis & Co., Limited, 6, Fleet-street, Dublin.
Trotter Oil. Electric Oil. Hair Colour Restorer. Depilatory
Powder. Assorted I'oilet Soaps. Spirit of Love Perfume, Assorted
Pomades. Crystal Creams. Perfumes. Violet Powder.
IRISH SECTION.
241
1293 Cherry and Smalldridge, Seville Steam Works,
Seville Place, Dublin.
Mustard in the raw and manufactured state.
1294 Denny Lane, Silverspring Starch Works, Glanmire,
Co. Cork.
Rice Starch, Blue and White.
1296 Sir James Murray & Son, Chemical Works, Graham’s
Court, Temple-street, Dublin.
Fluid Magnesia. Fluid Camphor. Acidulated Syrup.
1297 Molyneux and Ferguson, 7, Wilton Square South,
Belfast.
Samples of Irish Wheat and Irish Wheat Starch.
1298 Marsh & Co. Limited, Donegall-street, Belfast, Ireland.
Samples of Biscuits in tins.
1299 Samuel McCausland, Belfast.
Grass Seeds of Irish growth. Grass Seeds recleaned. Samples
of Weeds, &c., extracted from grass seeds.
1300 Percy H. Buss, Culleenamore, Co. Sligo.
Oysters.
1301 Kelly, Dunne, & Co., Limited, 51 to 55, Watling
street, Dublin.
Trotter and Neatsfoot Oil. Sausage Casings. Racket and
Whip Strings. Sheep Pelts. Lambs’ and Sheep’s Wool. Parchment.
1302 James F. Creedon, 27, South Mall, Cork.
Lotion.
1303 W. & H. M. Goulding, Limited, 25, Eden Quay,
Dublin ; and Glen, Cork.
Bone Manure. Special Manure. Corn and Grass Manure.
Superphosphate. Bone Compound. French Superphos. Dissolved
Guano. Sugar-cane Food. Guano Irlandes. Vigne Manure. Rice
Manure.
1304 W. J. Shaw & Sons, Limited, Garryowen Bacon
Factory, Limerick
Bacon, Hams, Lard, and other Pork products.
1305 J. Carmichael-Ferrall, Augher Castle, Augher, Co.
Tyrone.
Oatmeal, Wheatmeal, Steery, McLean’s Mixture, Cows’ Delight.
Q
:ic::^5aF'nr .^:w-
1306
1307
1308
1308
1309
1310
1311
1312
1313
1314
1315
1316
Samuel Martin Macrory, Ardmore and Ne^vtown
Mills, Limavady, Co. Londonderry.
Oats grown in Co. Londonderry. Oatmeal : course cut, medium
cut, supeiline cut. Pin Head Oatmeal. Groats (whole). Groats
(rolled). ‘ Meal Seeds or Oat Bran.
Hugh Rainey, Jun., Church-street, Ballymena, Co.
Antrim, Ireland.
Pale Dried Irish Rolls, Pale Dried Irish Bellies, Smoked Irish
Roll, Smoked Irish Belly, Pale Dried Irish Hams, Smoked Irish Ham,
Small Pickled Cured Pig.
Charles James Hill, King-street, Waterford.
Wateiford Eggs.
John G. Rathborne, Dublin.
Caudles made of Wax, Candles made of Spermaceti, Candles
made of Paraffin, Samples of Crude and Refined Products of which the
Caudles are made.
Fredk. King& Co. Limited, 26, Waring- street, Belfast;
and 6, Bishopsgate Avenue, London.
Preserved Potato, Desiccated Soup, White (Vegetable) Soup.
J. Matterson & Sons, Roches-street, Limerick.
Hams, Bacon, Lard, Sausages, Tinned Meats, Tinned Soups.
T. J. Clanchy & Co., Butter Preserving Works, Cork.
Preseiwed Butter, in tins and other packages. Cured and
Fresh Butter.
J. Power & Co., 21, Drury-street, Dublin.
Irish Creamery Butter.
A. Millar & Co., 10, 11, 12, Thomas Street, Dublin.
British Wines, Cordials, and Liqueurs.
C. & J. O’Sullivan, Blarney-street, Cork.
Butter, in firkins, other packages, and tins.
Creameries Association of Ireland, 16 , College Green,
Dublin.
Butter from the Creameries at Ashfield, Baiibridge. Belturbet,
Coachford, Cootehill, Mohill, Killeshandra, Galbally, Glenade, Clogher
Park, Bride Valley, Golden, Kenmare, Geraldine, Castlehale, Munster
Dairy Co., Ennismore, and Sallowglen.
M. Glover, 124, St. Stephen’s Green, Dublin.
Photographs, Portraits, and Studies, executed on paper and
porcelain.
IRISH SECTION.
243
1317 William Lawrence, 5 and 7, Upper Sackville-street,
Dublin.
Magic Lantern Slides of the Scenery and Antiquities of Ireland.
1318 William Lawrence, 5 and 7, Upper Sackville-street,
Dublin.
Photographs of the Scenery and Antiquities of Ireland.
Specimens of Photographic Portraiture.
1320 J. Lafayette, 30, Westmoreland-street, Dublin.
Photographs taken direct from life : Her Majesty the Queen,
taken by command in drawing-room at Osborne, Feb. 10, 1887 (two
views) ; Her Excellency the Marchioness of Londonderry, Her Grace
the Duchess of Leinster, Lady Brooke, Miss Armytage Moore, the
Misses Darley, Miss Dufresne, Baby Poole.
1321 Werner & Son, 39, Grafton-street, Dublin.
Large Photographs (portraits). Enlargements on Argentic
Bromide paper from cabinet negatives. Painted enlargements in oil
colours.
1322 John Chancellor, Photographer, 55, Lower Sackville-
street, Dublin.
Frame of Large Portraits, taken direct from life, of their Royal
Highnesses the Prince and Princess of Wales, Her Serene Highness
the Princess Edward of Saxe Weimar, their Excellencies the Lord
and Lady Lieutenants, Lord Castlereagh, Lord Rossmore, Lady
Ranfurly, the Hon. Miss Crofton, Mdlle. Albani and Mdlle. Nordica,
the late Fred Archer, &c.
1323 James C. Semple, 64, Grosvenor-road, Rathinines,
Dublin.
Photographic Enlargements. Transparencies, &c. Optical
Lantern and Enlarging Apparatus.
1325 Simpson Shepherd, 10, Olphansus Avenue, Druin-
condra, Dublin.
Inlaid Panels of Wood and Marble, Bossie work. (Artisan ex
hibitor.)
1326 Fritz Schumann, 19, William-street, Dublin.
Specimens of Engraving on Stone. (Artisan exhibitor.)
IN THE ROYAL BOTANICAL GARDENS.
1345 Follows and Bate, Limited, Froxmer-street, Gorton,
Manchester.
Model Tool House and Potting Shed, for the convenient and
safe storage of all the Implements, Tools, and Fire Extinguishing and
other Apparatus used in Exhibition grounds. New Patent Silent
Gorton Lawn Mower, lOin., for hand. Tennis and Anglo Lawn
Mower, for hand. Patent Pony Lawn Mower, with improved tipping
aiTangement. Improved Garden Pollers, from 20in., double
cylinders. Improved Garden Engine, 20 gallons. Improved Garden
Pump. Improved Garden Water Barrow, 20 gallons. Improved
Garden Barrows, Iron and Wood. Patent Garden Plough, complete
with Shovel, Plough, Cultivator, Rake, Double Furrow Mould Board
for hilling up Potatoes and Seed Drill. Improved Hand Gap Seed
Drill. Improved Garden Hose Reel, to hold 200ft. fin. hose. Coil ot
Hose for ditto. Assortment of Garden Hoes, Rakes, and Spades.
Assortment of Hedge Cutters and Tree Primers. Assortment of
Garden Shears and Border Shears. Improved Horticultural Tool
Chest, complete. Patent Lawn Edge Cutter. Patent Gardener’s
Door Mat, in iron. Garden Tools, assorted. Patent Pot Plunger.
Assortment of Watering Pots. Gardener’s Grindstone, on high
stand. Patent Cap Glasses. Economic Hot Water Heating Boiler,
for Greenhouses, will heat 150ft. Sin. piping. Patent Tennis
Court Marker. Bailey’s Patent Hot Air Engine.
1346 T. & L. Noar, 38, Church-street, Manchester.
Lawn Tent.
1347 The Manchester and District Edison Electric Light
Co., Limited, 12, Victoria Buildings, and 7, St. Marys
Gate, Manchester.
A Complete Installation, showing application of Electricity for
House Lighting, including about 70 Edison-Swan incandescent lamps,
electroliers, brackets (Osier’s), controlling switches, safety fuses,
cables, wires (Glover’s), 32 “ B 23 ” Elwell-Parker grid plate cells, 5-unit
dynamo, with flywheel and jockey pulley, 5h.p. vertical Otto gas
engine complete, with water tanks, Ac.
1347aCrossley Bros. Limited, Openshaw, near Manchester.
Five Horse-power Vertical Otto Gas Engine complete, with water
tanks, Ac., driving 5-unit dynamo, in Edison House, Botanical
Gardens.
EXHIBITS IN ROYAL BOTANICAL GARDENS.
1347bKendal, Milne and Co., Deansgate, Manchester.
Suite of Drawing-room, Dining-room, Bedroom, and Boudoir
Furniture for the Jubilee House in the Botanical Gardens.
1347cOrme & Sons, Blackfriars-street, Manchester.
Billiard -room Fittings in Jubilee House, Botanical Gardens.
1347dIsaac Dixon & Co., Windsor Iron Works, Spekeland-
road, Edge Hill, Liverpool.
Iron Residence, with billiard-room attached, suitable for shooting
lodge or dwelling-house, containing above Installation.
■ ■ y
I
OLD MANCHESTER AND SALFORD.
1 Lloyd, Payne, & Amiel, 10, 12, and 14, Thomas-street,
Shudehill, Manchester.
Sterling Silver Jewellery. Gold Jewellery, plain, or set with
precious stones. Gold and Silver Watches and Watch Materials.
Real Coral. Jet, Amber, Agate, and Onyx Jewellery. . Imitation
Jewellery. Fans, and Mounted Scent Bottles. Clocks. Bronzes.
Optical Goods. Opera and Field CBasses. Electro-plated Ware.
Cutlery. Ivory Goods. Desks. ’ Inkstands. Workhoxes. Musical
Boxes. Ladies’ and Gentlemen’s Fitted Dressing Bags. Trunks.
Bags. Picnic Baskets. Flasks. Albums. Necessaires. Fitted
Dressing Cases. Combs, Brushes, Ac. Papier Mache Goods, English
and foreign. China Ornaments and Earthenware, Ac. Jewellery
manufactured on the premises.
2 Bryan Bernard Finnic an, 115, Market-street, Manchester
Portmanteaus, Fitted Bags, and Leather Goods.
3 C. Joseph & Co., 277, Pentonville-road, King’s Cross
London.
Working Jeweller and Mounter of South African Cat’s Eye.
4 Burtles, Tate, & Co., Flint Glass Manufacturers, Poland-
street, Oldham -road, Manchester.
Cut and Engraved Glass of all descriptions. Fancy and Art
Decorative Glass. Glass engraving and working in operation.
4 A John Heywood, Deansgate and Ridgefield, Manchester.
“Harrop’s Weekly Mercury” Office, containing old-fashioned
Wood Press, and other appliances used for printing a newspaper
during the last Century, with Pressman, dressed in the costume of
the period, working a fac-simile of “Harrop’s Mercury ” for November
28th, 1769. Interior of Old Bookbinding Shop, showing method of
working ; also Specimens of Various Styles of Ancient Bindings.
5 William Wilde, Bethel Works, Macclesfield.
A Hand Loom at work, making silk handkerchiefs for ladies’ or
gentlemen’s use. Another Loom making a novel tie specially for
ladies’ wear.
6 George Falkner & Sons, The Deansgate Press, Manchester.
Representation of a Printing Office of the Caxtonian period, with
Exhibits of Rare Books and Manuscripts, and Curiosities connected
with the Art. The ancient wooden press is shown in operation as in
the XV. century.
250
OLD MANCHESTER AND SALFORD.
7 H. ISamuel, Lever Watch and Clock Factory, 97 and 99,
Market-street, Manchester.
Watches, Clocks, and Jewellery. Interesting operations in the
manufacture and finishing of English Watches; also the twisting of
curb chains, and gilding of same, and Jubilee Exhibition Badges and
Brooches.
8 John Jones, Art Metal Worker, Walkers Croft, near
Victoria Station, Manchester.
Wrought-iron Gates, Finials, Railing, Vanes, Lamp Brackets,
Balusters, Hinges, Door Handles, Bolts, Altar Standards, Lightning
Conductors, Gas Pendants, and Brackets. Iron, Brass, and Gun-
metal Casements, Casement Fittings, Ac.
8a Philip Morris & Co., Limited, 41 and 42, Poland-
street, and 5, Great Marlboro’-street, London, W.
“ Golden Reign” and other Cigarettes. “ Golden Reign” and
other Tobaccos, and process of manuLcturing same.
9 W. H. Bailey & Co., Hydraulic Engineers, Albion
Works, Salford, Manchester.
Clock Tower. Turret Clock and Bells and Chiming Apparatus.
The clock is on the system invented and patented by Mr. W. H.
Bailey. It is on the lathe-bed principle, and fitted with Beckett’s
gravity escapement, the wheels are gun-metal, and the pinions of
steel, and each wheel can be removed without interfering with the
others, or any part of the mechanism. The clock dials are six-feet in
diameter, and, in imitation of old clocks, the hands are only fitted.
The hands are from the design of a clock 300 years ago, now existing
in the Chetham College, Manchester. The hours and quarters are
struck on bells cast by Messrs. W. H. Bailey & Co., and the total
weight of bells is over one ton. The quarters are chimed in imitation
of those in Saint Mary’s College, Cambridge. Thirteen bells for
Clock to strike the hours and quarters upon, and also for chiming
tunes by hand on Ellacomb’s system, improved and patented by
Mr. W. H. Bailey. Total value of clock, bells, and chiming
machinery, complete, £410. Turnstiles to the Bridge and Tower,
manufactured and lent by W. H. Bailey & Co.
10 Harrison Patent Knitting Machine Co., 128, Port-
land-street, Manchester.
Knitting Machines, including New Embossed Pattei'ii Knitting
Machine. The New Glove IMachine. The New Jacquard Machine.
The New Automatic Fashioning Machine. The New Steam Power
Machine, which stops automatically at the fashionings. Tlie New
Steam Power Jersey and Cardigan Machine. The New World’s Star
Circular Knitting Machine. The Steam Power Driving Arrangement
for the World’s Star. The New Harrison Patent Duplex Circular
Knitting Machines. The New Hosiery Clothing Seaming Machines,
OLD MANCHESTER AND SALFORD.
251
which makes all sizes of Elastic Stitches. Seaming and Taking-ofF
Machine. Samples of Knitted Clothing and Hosiery. The Power
Machines will be driven by Bailey A Co.’s Water Motor.
11 George Newton, 31, Dale-street, Manchester.
Umbrellas in Cotton, Alpaca, and Silk, suitable for Home and
Export trades. Parasols for ditto. Walking Sticks for ditto.
African Chiefs’ Umbrellas and Tents, Tent Umbrellas for Lawns, Ac.
llA Frances Wilkinson, Mansfield Chambers, St. Ann’s
Square, Manchester
Decorative Art Screens, Plaqiies, China, Ac., and Decorative Art
Needlework.
12 Thomas Parker & Sons, Confectioners, 18, St. Mary’s
Gate, and 10, St. Ann’s Square, Manchester.
Wedding Cakes and Confectionery.
13 T. R. WiTHECOMB, 16 and 18, Victoria-street, and 66,
Market-street, Manchester.
Making and Repairing Pipes of Briarwood, Meerschaum, and
other materials. Making Amber Cigar and Cigarette Tubes and
Pipe Mouthpieces. Making Silver Screw and other Mounts for
pipes, Ac.
14 Mrs. E. Hart, Donegal House, Donegal Industrial Fund,
43, Wigmore House, London.
The “ Kells ” Embroideries. Hand Spinning and Hand-loom
Weaving of Irish Homespuns. Hand-knitted Hosiery and Smallw'are.
Hand-spun Linen. Hand-printed Linen. Hand Embroideries of all
kinds, and Laces.
16 Elliot, Edminson, and Olney, 79, Deansgate, Manchester.
Repousse Work in operation. Marble Mosaic Work (Italian) in
operation.
17 A. Mackie, 23, Stadium-street, Chelsea, S.W.
Fist Class Shaving and Hair-cutting Saloon and Wig Making.
Illustrations of the Ancient and New Styles of Hair-dressing for
Ladies and for Gentlemen. The new Royal Alexandra Heliotrope
Perfume.
18 London and County Photographic Co., 63, St. Paul’s
Churchyard, London.
Views of the Town Hall, Old Manchester Church, The Market-
sted, and the Swan Coaching Office.
252
OLD MANCHESTER AND SALFORD.
19 Broome, Hallworth, & Foster, St. Peters Square, Man-
chester.
Fustian Cutting, applied to the production of the Pile in
Velutina.
20 Alfred Tozer, Superintendent Fire Brigade, Manchester;
Chief Fire Station, Jackson’s Bow, Manchester.
Fire Extinguishing Appliances. Brazen Hand Squirt, 1667
A Newsham Fire Engine, 1725. Firemen’s Helmets, from -about
1700, with Belts and Axes, and Speaking Trumpet. An Original
Parchment Protection from being impressed either to serve on land
or sefu Old L^niforms from 1798. Several Photographs and
Engravings of Fires. Old Hose Unions, Branch-pipes and Stand-pipe.
The Manchester Old Watchman’s Billhook. Bell used by watch-
man after the curfew was abolished, with a complete set of Ricks
used at different periods.
LOAN COLLECTION.
LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS OF PICTURES, PAINTINGS, AND OTHER
INTERESTING AND VALUABLE RELICS IN OLD MAN-
CHESTER AND SALFORD.
Earl of Ellesmere, Worsley Hall.
Sir Humphrey De Trafford, Bart., Ti afford Park.
Sir William Cunliffe Brooks, Bart,, M.P., Barlow Hall.
Messrs. Thomas Agnew A Sons, Exchange-street, Manchester.
P. Allen, Esq., Sedgley Park.
Frank Andrew, Esq., Chester Square, Ashton-under-Lyne.
W. J. Andrew, Esq., Ashton-under-Lyne.
George B. Ashworth, Esq., Birtenshaw House, Bolton.
John Eglinton Bailey, Esq., F.S.A., Egerton Villa, Stretford.
W. H. Bailey, Esq. (Alderman), Summeilield, Salford.
Elias Bancroft, Esq., 30, Plymouth Grove, Chorlton-on-Medlock.
Charles T. Tallent Bateman, Esq., Brown-street, Manchester.
Thos. a. Bazley, Esq., Cheetham Hill.
James R. Beard, Esq., J.P., Ardwick.
m
OLD MANCHESTER AND SALFORD.
253
T. H. G. Berrey, Esq., Town Hall, Manchester.
A. Birch, Esq., 238, Eccles New-road, Weaste.
Messrs. Henry Blacklock & Co., Albert Square, Manchester.
Messrs. D. Bolongaro & Son, Market-street, Manchester.
T. F. Bond, Esq., Ogden’s Buildings, Bridge-street.
T. Bowker, Esq., Flixton.
Edward Briggs, Esq., 104, Lond on-road, Manchester.
Mrs. Brocklebank, Brockhurst, Didsbury.
J. AV. Buxton, Esq. {Manchester Guardian.)
J. C. Charlton, Esq., New Holme, Palatine-road, Withington.
Dr. AV. H. Clarke, Park Green, Macclesfield.
J. E. Cornish, Esq., Piccadilly, Manchester.
John Coxon, Esq., 28, Oxford-street, Manchester.
— Dalton, Esq., Cheetham Hill.
Alfred Darbyshire, Esq., Brazeimose-street.
Robert Dauntesey, Esq., Agecroft Hall, near Manchester.
MTlliam Dennerley, Esq., Union-street, Church-street, Manchester.
Henry Duck, Esq., Spring Bank, Cheetham Hill.
J. P. Earwaker, Esq., M.A., F.S.A., Pensarn, Abergele.
George Esdalie, Esq., Stretford.
J. Farrell, Esq. {Manchester Courier.)
W. "Wareing Faulder, Esq., Ellerslie, Cheetham Hill.
John Galloway, Esq., Coldstream House, Old Trafford.
Henry Galloway, Esq., Brazennose-street.
Andrew Gillies, Esq., Secretary Jubilee Exhibition.
Henry Goldsmith, Esq., Faulkner-street, Manchester.
Samuel Gratrix, Esq., Alport Town, Manchester.
Thomas R. Hadfield, Esq., Woodbine-street, Moss Side.
\Vard Heys, Esq., Ridgefield, Manchester.
Nathan Heywood, Esq., Mount-street, Manchester.
Charles Hughes, Esq., Cheetwood House, Manchester.
Robert Jackson, Canal Bridge, Failsworth.
Kay Bros., Stockport.
S. Kidd, Esq., Wellington-street, Salford.
Edward Kirkpatrick, Esq., Heathside, Knutsford
Alfred Leaf, Esq., Belle Vue, Pendleton.
Thomas Leatherbarrow, Brooks’s Bank, Manchester.
Corporation of Manchester, per H. Rawson, Esq.
Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway, per E. Ross, Secretary,
254
OLD MANCHESTER AND SALFORD.
Councillor J. D. Milne, Deansgate.
Joseph Moseley, Esq., Chapelfield Works, Ardwick.
Albert Nicholson, Esq., Fountain-street.
Francis Nicholson, Esq., F.Z.S., Oakfield, Ashley-road, Altrincham.
Richard Parkinson, Esq., Bolton-road, Pendleton.
James Parlane, Esq., Appleby Lodge, Rusholme.
F. W. Peel, Esq., Dry wood Hall, Worsley.
John Plant, Esq. Peel Park.
James H. Pinley, Esq., Bishop-street, Moss Side.
Walter Prince, Esq., Monton- road, Eccles.
Reform Club, Manchester.
Dr. Alfred Renshaw, Sale.
G. H. Robotham, Esq., Manchester and Salford Bank, Mosley-street.
C. M. Royds, Esq., Rochdale.
Royal Salford Museum, Peel Park.
Charles Schwabe, Esq., Glenthorne, Whalley Range.
William Smith, Esq., Hope Bank, Hope-road, Brooklands.
Edwin Simpson, Esq., J.P., Brooklands.
— Stensley, Esq.
Albert Sutton, Esq., Portland-street, Manchester,
Charles W. Sutton, Esq., Free Reference Library, Manchester.
Richard Sutton, Esq., Portland-street, Manchester.
Frederick L. Tavare, Esq., Rusholme Grove.
Alexander Taylor, Esq., Tenterton-street, Bury.
Thomas Taylor, Esq., Grove House, Sale.
Technical School (The Council of The).
H. Thornby, Esq., Sale.
The Town Hall Sub-Committee.
Thomas Turnbull, Esq., Lloyd-street, Greenheys.
John Whitehead, Esq., Somerlease, Ashley-road, Altrincham.
Francis Wisedall, Esq., Goole.
Robert Wood, Esq., The Cottage, Birch, near Manchester.
Richard Wood, Esq., J.P., Highfield, Sydenham, Kent.
AVilliam Worrall, Esq., J.P., Salford.
AV. Tindall Carill AA'orsley, Esq., Platt Hall, Rusholme.
Miss AVorsley, Ashton-lane, Ashton-on-Mersey, Sale.
Thomas Locke AA^orthington, Esq., Torrington Square, London, AA^C.
T. F. AA^right, Esq., The Airds, Higher Crumpsall.
?■'
CATALOGUE
ABBREVIATIONS FOR CATALOGUE EXI^LAINED.
P.R.A. — President of the Royal Academy.
R.A. — Royal Academician.
A.R.A — Associate of the Royal Academy.
R.S.A. — Royal Scottish Academician.
A.R.S.A. — Associate of Royal Scottish Academy.
P.R.H.A. — President of Royal Hibernian Academy.
R.H.A. — Royal Hibernian Academician.
R.W.S. — Member of Royal Society of Painters in Water Colours.
R.I. — Member of Royal Institute of Painters in Water Colours.
P.M.A. — President Manchester Academy.
OIL PAINTINGS,
GALLERY No. 1
J. O’CONNOR
Pextonville, by Sunset
Isaac Holden^ Esq.
SEYMOUR LUCAS, A.R.A.
After Culloden Purchased hy the President and Council
of the Royal Academy^ under the terms of the Chantrey
Bequest^ and lent hy them.
W. P. YEAMES, R.A.
A Visit to the Haunted Chamber R. M. Knoivles^ Esq.
HENRY WOODS, A.R.A.
Water Sellers, San Rocco, Venice C. F. Cundy, Esq.
MAUDE GOODMAN
Un Chauson des Fleurs B. Warwick Esq.
MRS. BRIDELL-FOX
Portrait of W. J. Fox (d. 1864 Lcate M.P. for Oldham).. Afrs. Bridell-Fox
ALFRED GOODPELLOW.
Room over Lower Gateway, Chetham’s Hospital J. Broivn^ Esq.
ili ' ~
258
CALLEKY Nr. 1.
E. CROFTS, A.R.A.
8 . Ironsides Returning from vSacking a Cavalier’s House
John Rhodes, Esq.
S. SIDLEY
9 The Right Hon. Henry Fam'Cett, M.P. (d. \^^^)...Churchioardens.
and Overseers of the Parish of St. John, Hackney, London
ELIZABETH BUTLER (Mis.^ Thompson)
10 Balaclava John Whitehead, Esq
WILLIAM STOTT, OF OLDHAM.
11 The Bathers The Artist
I H. W. B. DAVIS, R.A.
12 A Prairie Alfred Morrison, Esq
13 June Shoavers Emil Reiss, Esq.
14 Evening II. II. Bolton, Esq.
I SIR T. A. JONES, P.R.H.A.
15 Rt. Hon. Sir Maziere Brady, Bart. (d. 1871. Lord Chancellor
I of Ireland) National Gallery of Ireland
ELIZABETH BUTLER (Miss Thompson)
16 The Connaught Hangers John Whitehead, Esq
S. CARTER
17 Gelert Richard Peacock, Esq., M.P.
F. W. W. TOPHAM
18 Drawing for Military Service — Modern Italy.... F. IP. Grafton, Esq.
' W. C. T. DOBSON, R A.
19 I Nut Gatherers Ldivard Ross, Esq.
\ G. A. STOREY, A.R.A.
20 The Shy Pupil William Slater, Esq
W. HOLMAN HUNT
21 Claudio and Isabella Thomas Ashton, Esq
Claudio. Death is a fearful thing.
Isabella. And shamed life a hateful.
J. HAYLLAR
22 The Old Master.
Corporation of Nottingham
B. W. LEADER, AR.A.
23 1 February Fill-dyke J. E. Wilson, Esq.
I C. J. LEWIS
24 An Oatfield, Wemille, Artois II. IV. Elliott, Esq.
ARTHUR STOCKS
A Rod in Pickle T. J. llirst^ Esq.
B. LONG. R.A.
Mliss T. J. Hirst, Esq.
COLIN HUNTER, A.R.A.
The Herring Market at Sea City of Manchester
HENRY WOODS, A.R.A.
Preparation for the First Communion A. Palmer, Esq.
W. C. ESTALL
Winter C. E. Red fern. Esq
J. SANT, R.A.
Love Birds The Artist
ALFRED W. HUNT
Leafy June J. Arthur Kenrich, Esq.
A. STUART WORTLEY
Miss Maud Waller C. Waller, Esq.
W. HOLMAN HUNT
Professor Owen The Artist
The Scapegoat (See “Leviticus,” chap, xvi.) Lord Brassey
The Shadow of Death City of Manchester
Strayed Sheep G. Lillie Craih, Esq.
FRANK DILLON
Pyramids W. II. Wills, Esq.
ROBERT CROZIER, P.M.A.
The Patriot J. H. Sheldon, Esq.
G. F. WATTS, R.A.
His Eminence Cardinal Manning The Artist
C. NAPIER HEMY
.Mending Nets Thomas Wardle, Esq
J. SANT, R.A.
Peaches Colonel Hargreaves
ALFRED W. HUNT
Whitby — Evening W. Kenrich, Esq., M.P.
L. P. SMYTHB
Boulogne Harbour Steps G. Findlay, Esq.
A. W. HUNT.
Whitby — Morning W. K enrich, Esq. M.P.
FORD MADOX BROWN
Work City of Manchester
At that time (1852) extensive excavations connected with the
supply of water were going on in the neighbourhood, and seeing and
studying as I did, daily, the British excavator, or navvy, as he designates
himself, in the full swing of his activity, with his manly and picturesque
costume, and with the rich glow of colour which exercise under a hot
sun will impart, it appeared to me that he was at least as worthy of the
powers of an English painter as the fishermen of the Adriatic, the
peasants of the Campagna, or the Neapolitan lazzarone. These workers
in manly health and strength are contrasted with the Pariah, who has
never learned to work, and with the mental and spiritucd workers, of
whom Carlyle and F. D. Maurice were chosen as the types, apparently
idle, looking on the whole scene. The lady, whose only work it is to
dress and look beautiful for our pleasure, and a group of ragged, mother-
less children, who might arouse her interest if it could extend outside
her own personality and her pet dog’s luxury, with the pot-boy plying
his trade with the navvies, and an infinitude of suggestive figures and
material — all converge to the one idea of “ Work.”
48
Lazy Moments
J.
S. NOBLE
49
School Belles
F.
MORGAN
. John Thompson^ Esq.
50
Home After Service
F. W.
W. TOPHAM
51
The Ladies’ Knight
■ D. W.
WYNFIELD.
‘‘ It was customary, when a knight was about to contend on behalf
of the ladies of his country for his fair constituents to present him
with a favour, to be worn on the occasion, truth it is that the
Wednesday next before the solemn and devout re.surrection of our
blessed Saviour, I drew me near to the Queen of England and France
(Elizabeth Woodville), to whom I am right humble servant, subject, and
brother. And as I spoke to her Highness, on bended knee, I know
not how it was, but the ladies of her court environed me about, and
I took heed that they had given me a collar, to which was attached
a flower of souvenance, enamelled, and in a manner of emprise,” &c. —
Vide “Letter from Sir Anthony Wmdville, Knight for the Ladies of
England, to the Count de la Roche, Knight for the Ladies of
Burgundy.”
GALLERY N<>. 1
HOWARD HELMICK
niTER JF. Hawkins, Esq.
L. P. SMYTHE
G. Findlay, Esq.
WILLIAM PERCY
Rev. George Henry Wells, M.A Trustees of the Memorial Hall
J. MACWHIRTER, A.R.A.
Loch Scavaig, Isle of Skye Lord Burton
FORD MADOX BROWN
Romeo and Juliet James Leathart, Esq.
W. P. YEAMES, R,A.
Prince Arthur and Hubert City of Manchester
“ 0, spare mine eyes ! Though to no use but still to look on you.”
Kinq John, Act iv., scene 1.
MARCUS STONE, A.R.A.
Edward II. and his Favourite, Piers Gaveston Geo. Fox, Esq.
“ Gaveston was not only the Adonis of the English Court but
remarkable for his kuightly prowess, graceful manners, and sparkling
wit. It was the latter qualification which rendered him peculiarly dis-
pleasing to the English nobles, whom he was accustomed to deride and
mimic for the amusement of his thoughtless Sovereign ; nor was the
Queen exempted when he was disposed to display his sarcastic powers.”
GEORGE CHESTER
Mark Lemon (d. 1870. First Editor of P?mcA).... TP. II. Bradbury, Esq.
Harvest of the Sea
C. NAPIER HEMY
Saved A. G. Sandeman, Esq.
WALTER C. HORSLEY
In Time of Need /?. P. Harding, Esq.
“In time of scarcity the women from the country districts round
Cairo come into town to sell their ornaments in the Gold and Silver
Bazaar.”
E. PARTON
Twilight Walter Towne, Esq.
FORD MADOX BROWN
Cromwell on His EAini
TP. Brockhank, Esq.
W. MACLAREN
Neapolitan Flower Seller
John Brinton, Esq., M.I
ALBERT MOORE.
Venus
The Quartette
TP. Coltart, Esq.
W. Coltart, Esq.
GAT.LEHY No. 1
G. W. MITCHELL
ATIA Charles Lucas, Esq.
“On, up the nave, fresh shreds of her dress strewing the holy
pavement — up the chancel steps themselves — up to the altiir — right
underneath the great still Christ, and there even those hell-hounds
paused She shook herself free from her tormentors,
and springing back, rose for one moment to her full height, naked, snow-
white, against the dusky mass around — shame and indignation in those
wide clear eyes but not a stain of fear. With one hand she clasped her
golden locks around her, the other long white arm was stretched upward
toward the great still Christ appealing — who dare say in vain ? — from
man to God. Her lips were opened to speak ; but the words that should
have come from them reached God’s ear alone ; for in an instant Peter
struck her down.” — Hypatia,” chap, xxix., hy Charles Kingsley.
ERSKINE NICOL, A.R.A
Outward Bound
Homeward Bound
Jesse Ilaivorth, Esq.
Jesse Haworth, Esq.
G. B. O’NEILL
G. C. Deivhurst, Esq.
The Obstinate Juryman
Daniel Thwaites, Esq.
In Memoriam
SEYMOUR LUCAS, A.R.A
William Knowles, Esq.
The Eloped
T. ARMSTRONG
W. L. Evans, Esq.
The Fountain
Citi/ of Manchester
Hard Times
D. MURRAY
G. W. Parker
EYRE CROWE, A.R.A.
Foe in the Pillory J. L. Newall^
‘‘ July 31, 1703. — Daniel Foe, alias De Foe, this day stood in the
pillory at Temple Bar, in pursuance of his senteace, given against him
at the last sessions at the Old Bailey, for writing and publishing a
seditious libel, entitled “ The Shortest Way with the Dissenters.’ ” — Vide
“ the London Gazette,” 1703.
“ . . . During his exhibition he was piotected by the same
friends from the missiles of his enemies, and the mob, instead of pelting
him, resorted to the unmannerly act of drinking his health. Tradition
reports that the machine, which wrs graced with one of the keenest
wits of the day, was adorned with garlands. • . . On the very day
of his exhibition he published his ‘Hymn to the Pillory .’ — See W'dson's
“ Life of De Foe.”
1
I
I
1
GALLERY No. 1
PETER GRAHAM, R.A.
By the Lock Samuel Armifa.ge^ Esq.
G. H. BOUGHTON, A.R.A.
The Wrestlers John Rhodes, Esq.
DAVID MURRAY, A.R.S.A.
My Love has Gone a Sailing Purchased hy the President
and Conned of the Royal Academy, under the terms
of the Chantrey Bequest, and lent hy them
G. A. STOREY, A.R.A.
The Blue Girls of Canterbury R. M. Knowles, Esq.
T. ARMSTRONG
'I’liE Three Graces Samuel Poq^^ Esq., Q.C.
W. C. T. DOBSON, R-A.
The Prosperous Day of Job James Houldsworth, hsq.
“ Oh, tliat I were as in months past, as in the days when God pre-
served me ; as I was in the day of my youth I was a father
to tlie poor ; and the cause, which I knew not, I searched out.” —
Joh xxix.
JOHN FAED, R.S.A.
The Auld Crockery Man John Rylands, Esq.
J. MAC WHIRTER, A R.A.
92 The Three Graces
Henry Mason, Esq
VICAT COLE, R.A.
Backwater on the Thames Colonel A. II. Brown, M.P.
R. REDGRAVE, R.A.
A Woodland Mirror Lord Brassey
BIRKET FOSTER
Fording the Stream U. Ar milage. Esq.
W. Q. ORCHARDSON, R.A.
The First Dance Henry Tate. Esq.
ARTHUR HOPKINS i
Signals of Distress G. B. Gregory, Esq, j
J. C. HORSLEY, R.A.
Coming Down to Dinner Henry Lee, Esq. j
I
BIRKET FOSTER !
In the Isle of Wight James Johnson, Esq. j
W. P. FRITH, R.A. \
Derby Day E. Gambart, Esq.
m
i
264
92a
92b
GALLERY No. 2.
SCULPTURE.
H. CALDER MARSHALL, R.A.
Ophelia
77ie Artist
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100 I
101 I
102 I
103 j
104
105 ;
106 ‘
107
108 I
HAMO THORNYCROFT, A.R.A.
Lot’s Wife (marble statue) The Artist
GALLERY No. 2.
R. HOOKE
A Portrait R. W. Williamson^ Esq,
E. J. GREGORY, A.R.A.
Portrait of a Lady C. J. Galloivay, Esq.
SEYMOUR LUCAS, A.R.A.
A Suspicious Guest William Knotvles, Esq.
W. M‘TAGGART, R.S.A.
Message from the Sea Albert Institute., Dundee.
H. S. MARKS, R.A.
The ^lixsTRELs’ Gallery T. A. Carter., Esq,
“ Item. — Paide to Ihon Catworthe and hys compagnie of myustralls
lb. s. d.
for musicke at ye aforesaide banquette i ; xii : vij.” — Grafton's Chronicle.
A. STUART- WORTLEY.
Grouse Driving A. Stopford, Esq.
W. LOGSDAIL
Venetian al Fresco Joseph Ruston, Esq.
JOHN PETTIE, R.A.
A Jester’s Merry Thought J. M. Keiller, Esq.
Terms to the Besieged Henry Waring, Esq.
Gentleman of the 17th Century S. Taylor Whitehead, Esq.
Sir Peter and Lady Teazle C. F. Cundy, Esq.
Sir Peter : Zounds, madam, you had no taste when you married me !
Lady T. : Very true, Sir Peter. — School for Scandal.
The Sisters David Price, Esq.
Ho ! Ho ! Old Nol Humphrey Roberts, Esq.
Gentleman of the 19tii Century J. G. Orchar, Esq.
The Laird J. G. Orchar, Esq.
Dost Know this Waterfly 1 Charles Ned, Esq-
m
GALLERY No. ?. 265
B. W. LEADER, A-R-A.
‘ With Verdure Clad C. W. Lea^ Esq.
MARK FISHER
A Scotch Hillside Henry Galloway, Esq.
\ J. PAEQUHARSON
I Life at Cairo The Artist
! ERSKINE NICOL, A.R.A.
I Both Puzzled G. F. II. Bolckovj, Esq.
“ But, sir, if ‘ wanst ’ nought be nothin’, then twice nought must
! be somethin,’ for it’s double what Svanst’ nought is.”
I — “ Hedge School” hy W. Carleton.
I W. J. MUCKLEY
An Offering The Artist
SIMEON SOLOMON
Love in Winter TF. Coltart, Esq.
I W. B. RICHMOND
Daughters of the Duke of Argyll Duke of Argyll
ANDERSON HAGUE
' Bracken Gatherers C. J. Galloway, Esq.
! T. SIDNEY COOPER, R.A.
I Drovers Collecting their Flocks on the Cumberland
I Fells Earl of Ellesmere.
I
; Waiting for Hire E. Ilallam, Esq.
i J. SYER
j Cornish Coast David Jardine, Esq.
H. CLARENCE WHAITE
Thirlmere Mrs. Wilkinson
T. SIDNEY COOPER, R.A.
, Early November (a Contrast) E. Hallam, Esq.
C. T. BURT
Yorkshire Moorland T. Hardcastle, Esq.
MARCUS STONE, A.R.A
My Lady is a Widow and Childless J. S. Virtue, Esq.
J. MACWHIRTER, A.R.A.
A Wet Day, Venice Colonel Hargreaves
OTTO WEBER
Cast A Shoe Baron J. II. Schroder
HENRY MOORE
Calm Before A Storm The Artist
J. W. WATERHOUSE, A.R.A.
A Flower Market at Old Rome J. T. Hirst, Esq.
H. HERKOMER, A.R.A.
Mr. Archibald Forbes (War Correspondent) The Artist
Mr, Frank C. Burnand (Editor of Futich) The Artist
H. S. MARKS, R.A.
A Treatise on Parrots ' George Holt, Esq.
“Splendid in hue, and delicate in form,
God’s feathered fairie.s, birds whose very effigies
In which but sound and movement back to life.
Plumage, shape, colour, all remaining still
Enchant the eye, and stir the dreamingTieart ;
And so the life-long lover of sweet fowls —
Old, calm, and solitary — feels the glow,
The love of science and the love of art.
Which stir the tender soul, yet strongly drawn,
To worship the Creator in His works.”
The Ornithologist Daniel Thwaites, Esq.
St. Francis Preaching to the Birds Angus Holden, Esq.
“ The very sermon addressed by the Saint to such an audience still
lives in the pages of his great biographer, Bonaventura. ‘ My little
brothers,’ it began, ‘you should love and praise the Author of your being,
who has clothed you with plumage and given you wings with which to fly
wherever you will. You were the first created of all animals. He pre-
served your race in the ark. He has given the pure atmosphere for your
dwelling-place. You sow not, neither do you reap. Without any care
of your own. He gives you lofty trees to build your nests in, and
watches over your young. Therefore, give praise to your bountiful
Creator.’ ” — Essays in Ecclesiastical Biography by Sir James Stephen, K.C.B.
The Apothecary H. J. Timier, Esq.
“ I do remember an apothecary.
And hereabouts he dwells, whom late I noted
In tatteied weeds, with overwhelming brow.'^,
Culling of simples ; meagre were his looks ;
Sharp mi.sery had worn him to the bones :
And in his needy shoj) a tortoi.se hung.
An alligator stuffed, and other skins
Of ill-shaped fi.shes ; and about his shelves
A beggarly account of empty boxes.
Green earthen pots, bladders, and musty seeds,
Remnants of pack thread, and old cakes of roses
Were thinly scattered, to make up a show.
Noting this penury, to my.self I said.
An if a man did need a poison now.
Whose sale is present death in Mantua,
Here lives a caitiff wretch would sell it him.”
“ Romeo arul .Tuliet," Act v., sc. i.
1
GALLERY No. 2.
R. LEHMANN
Lady Martin (Helen Faucit) Sir Theodore Martin
EMMA MAGNUS
Licinia, Wife of Caius Gracchus The Artist
J. YATES CARRINGTON
J’y Suis, J’y Reste David Waterloio, Esq.
W. FIELD
The Harrow View from Hampstead Heath The Artist
HENRY MOORE, A.R.A,
Mount’s Bay
City of Manchester
The Amateur
The Artist.
J. Felloioes^
J. Edward Reiss^
Summer Showers
W. II. Crahtree,
WILLIAM LINNELL,
Hesperus
G. C. Morrison.
W. F. YEAMES, R.A.
Prisoners of War, 1805 The Artist
ELIZABETH BUTLER (Miss Thompson.)
The Scout Joseph Moseley., Esq.
KATE PERUGINI
Vi< LET AND Uriel (Daughters of John Parsons, Esq.) The Artist
C. E. PERUGINI
A Labour of Love Sir Henry Bessemer
CLARA MONTALBA
The Last Journey W. Inqram, Esq.
E. HAYES, R.H.A.
Towing a Disabled Boat Dr. Orrock
St. Sampson’s Bay, Guernsey xi. T. Hollingsworth, Esq.
FRED. BROWN
Candidates for Girton Thomas Woodcock, Esq.
R. BEAVIS.
The Mouth of the Maes R. P. Harding, Esq.
W. W. OULESS, R.A.
The Late Mr. William Sale (an eminent Citizen of Man-
chester) The Committee of the Clarendon Cluh
Alderman Goldschmidt (Mayor cf Manchester, 1883-4,
1885-6. Presented to the City of Manchester by his
Fellow-citizens) City of Manchester
Mr. George Scharf, C.B., F.S.A. (Director and Secretary of
the National Portrait Gallery) ...The Trustees of the
National Portrait Gallery
His Eminence Cardinal Newman The Oratory, Birmingham
The Hon. Sir Henry Manisty (one of the Judges of the High
Court of Justice) Sir Henry Manisty
Mr. H. D. Pochin II. D. Pochin, Esq.
JOSEPH KNIGHT
An April Day" Lieut.-Col. Maivson
ALBERT MOORE
The Sisters Humphrey Roberts, Esq.
J. CLARK
Mother’s Darling Purchased by the President and Council
of the Royal xicademy under the terms of the Chantrey
Bequest and lent by them.
H. CARTER
At the Loom II. II. Bolton, Esq
JOHN COLLIER
The Last Voy"age of Henry Hudson {Purchased by the
President and Council (f the Royal Academy under the
terms of the Chantrey Bequest, and lent by them.)
Henry Hudson, the great navigator, made his last voyage to the
Polar Seas in 1610. In the summer of 1611 his crew mutinied and set
him adrift in an open boat, with his son, John Hudson, and some of tlie
most inferior of the sailors. They wei-e never heard of more.
GALLERY No. 2.
Joseph Rusion^ Esq.
The Piazza, Venice
The Artist
Tintagel
F. B. BARWBLL
Unaccredited Heroes The Artist
PETER GRAHAM, R.A.
Spate in the Highlands Sir William G. Brookes^ Bart.^ M.P.
YBEND KING
Courtyard of Musee de Cluny, Paris Thomas Wardle, Esq.
FRANK DICKSEE, A.R.A.
...Fur chased by the President and Council of the
Royal licademy under the terms of the Chantrey
Bequest., and lent by them.
C. B. JOHNSON
Gurth, the Swineherd Purchased by the President of the
Council of the Royal Academy under the terms of the
Chantrey Bequest, and lent by them.
J. BRETT, A.R.A.
Britannia’s ... Purchased by the President and Council
of the Royal Academy, under the terms of the Chantrey
Bequest, and lent by them.
W. FIELD
Persecuted, but not Forsaken (Hampstead Heath, during
the Five Mile Act in 1687) W. Wills, Esq.
“ Puritan congregations could meet only by night or in waste
places Death being denounced to both preachers and
hearers.” — Macaulay
J. MACWHIRTBR. A.R.A.
The Track of the Hurricane W. Lockett Agnew, Esq.
HILDA MONTALBA
Lake Sevelangen, Sweden The Artist
F. GOODALL, R.A.
Rebecca at the Well C. F. H. Bolckow, Esq.
Subsiding of the Nile C. F. H. Bolckow, Esq.
MARCUS STONE, A.R.A.
“ II Y EN A TOU JOURS UN AUTRE ” Purchased by the President
and Council of the Royal Academy, under the terms of
the Chantrey Bequest, and lent by them.
3
GALLERY No. 3
J. F. Hutton
April Love
E. BURNE JONES, A.R.A.
CHE George Hamilton^ E
And with that word she leapt into the stream,
But the kind river even yet did deem
That she should live, and, with all gentle care.
Cast her ashore within a meadow fair,
Upon the other side, where Shepherd Pan
Sat looking down upon the water w'an.
Goat-legged and merry, who called out ‘ Fair maid,
Why goest thou hurrj'ing to the feeble shade
Whence none return ? Well do I know thy pain,
For I am old, and have not lived in vain.
Thou wilt forget all that within a while.
And on some other happy youth will smile ;
And sure he must be dull indeed if he
Forget not all things in his ecstasy
At sight of such a wonder made for him.’ ”
— Vide Earthly Paradise” hy WiUiam Morri
W. B. RICHMOND
Daughters of the Dean of Christ Church... Dean of Christ Church
F. MADOX BROWN
F. Craven, Esq.
Love and the Maiden
Sir Edward Green, Bart.
WALTER CRANE
The Bridge of Life
The Artist
What is life ? A bridge that ever
Bears a throng across a river.
There the Taker, here the Giver.”
M. GOODMAN
Rival Blossoms
SANDYS
A. Rose, Esq
T. J. Barstoiv, Esq
J. B. BURGESS, A.R.A.
Troubles in the Church W. II. Houklsworth, Esq., M.T
Mrs. Rose ....
Mrs. Barstow
GALLERY No. 3.
E. BURNE JONES, A.R.A.
The Wheel of Fortune lit. Hon. A. J. Balfour^ M.P.
The Feast of Peleus W. Kenrich^ Esq.^ M.P.
The Story of Pygmalion. (The heart ^q'i^iyq'a.)... F rederick Craven., Esq.
The Story of Pygmalion. (The hand refrains. Craven, Esq.
The Story of Pygmalion. (The godhead fires.) ...Frederick Craven, Esq.
The Story of Pygmalion. (The soul attains.) ...Frederick Craven, Esq'
Sibylla Cum.e William Agneiv, Esq.
Sibylla Delphica Corporation of Manchester
Le Chant D’amour Joseph Fusion, Esq.
The Golden Stair Cpril Flower, Esq., M.P.
The Morning of the Resurrection Jiri?, Dyson Perrins
J. P. SHIELDS
Lazarus Mrs. Russell Gurney
“ The dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God.”
G. J. SPENCER STANHOPE
The Styx. Joseph Moseley, Esq.
W. GALE
Abraham and Isaac E. Darby shire. Esq.
R. LEHMANN
Out of the World H. Schlesinger, Esq.
“ Me vivum in silva fecit natura tacere :
Me cocsum ars cogit, dulse sonare loqui.”
“ Living a woodland tree, to be dumb was decreed me by nature :
Dead, how I sing, how 1 speak ! such is the magic of art.”
H. LE JEUNE, ARA.
The Dead Robin G. C. Dewhurst, Esq.
E. J. POYNTER, R.A.
An Offering to Isis TP. Brockhank, Esq.
J. E. HODGSON, R.A.
The Armourer II . J. Turner, Esq.
W. GALE
Waiting Place of the Jews at Jerusalem J. Rhodes, Esq.
PHILIP BURNE JONES
An Unpainted Masterpiece E. Naylor, Esq.
“ The room spoke most plaintively for itself. Shabby, sordid,
naked, it contained beyond the wretched bed but the scantie.st provision
for personal comfort. It was bedroom at once and studio — a grim gho.st
of a studio. ... Its only wealth was the picture on the ea.sel,
presumably the famous Madonna. ... A canvas that was a mere
dead blank, cracked and discoloured by time. This was his immortal
w’ork ! — the Madonna of the P'uture.” — H enry James.
f
WALTER CRANE
Freedom
The Artist
An Eastern Maiden
E. J. POYNTER, R.A,
A Suppliant to Venus
W. Brockhank^ Esq.
J. E. HODGSON, R.A.
A Needy Knife Grinder
//. J. Turner.^ Esq.
Meadows by the Avon
Corporation of Oldham
The Village Wedding.
Homeless
J. O’CONNOR
Market Place, Vicenza
Isaac Holden^ Esq..^ M.P.
W. F. YEAME3, R.A.
The Toast of the Kit-Cat Club R. Dawher, Esq.
It having fallen to the turn of the Duke of Kingston to propose a
beauty as the Annual Toast of the Club, he nominated his little daughter,
Lady Mary Pierrepoint (afterwards Lady Mary Wortley Montague).
Some of the members demurred, as they had not seen her. The Duke
sent for her, and when she arrived she was received with acclamations,
her claim unanimously allowed, and she was petted and caressed by all
the eminent men present, including Addison, Steele, Marlborough,
Congreve, &c.
E. LONG, R.A.
Baroness Burdett-Coutts Baroness Burdett-Coutts
Checkmate — Next Move
E. BARCLAY
Sporting with the Leaves at Fall ....
H. W. B. DAVIS, R.A.
Sea and Land Waves
Charles Churchill, Esq.
City of Manchester
Venetians
GALLERY No. 3.
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
J. C. HOOK, R.A.
Baiting for Haddock Mrs. Reiss
Cow-Tending David Price^ Esq.
A Sea Piece Sir J. E. Millais^ Bart.., R.A.
Wise Saws Charles Churchill, Esq.
“ Am I both priest and clerk ? AVell then, amen .” — Kiny Richard
II., Act iv., sc. i.
King Baby — The YTiite Sands of Iona John Pender, Esq.
J. AUMONIBR
The Last Load J. L. Kennedy, Esq.
H. W. B. DAVIS, R.A.
The Lowing Herd Winds Slowly o’er the Lea... F. IP. Grafton, Esq.
B. HUGHBS
Hon. Mrs. "W. Carrington IIou. Col. Carrington
CLARA MONTALBA
St. Mark’s, Venice, The Piazzetta Inundated The Artist
J. C. HORSLBY, R.A.
The Banker’s Private Room — Negotiating A Loan 'Trustees of the
Royal Holloway College
KBBLBY HALSWBLLB, R.S.A.
Royal Windsor Colonel Hargreaves
LUKB FILDBS, R.A.
The Return of the Penitent Holh'ooh Gaskell, Esq.
“ And every woe a tear may claim
Except an erring sister’s shame.” — Byron.
R. BBAVIS
Ploughing in Lower Egypt E. Armitage, Esq.
J. C. HORSLBY, R.A.
Rent Day at Haddon Hall A. C. Burnand, Esq.
VAL C. PRINSBP, A.R.A.
An Afternoon Gossip on the Banks of the Ganges The Artist
G. F. WATTS, R.A.
Mrs. Henry Manners (painted in 1881) The Artist
John Lothrop Motley The Artist
American Historian. Born 1814; published “ Rise of the Dutch
Republic,” 1856 ; “History of the United Netherlands,” 1860-7 ; Life
I and Death of John Bameveld,” 1874 ; United States Minister at Vienna,
i 1861-7 ; at London, 1869-7T). Died 1877.
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261 ;
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
G. P. WATTS, ~R. A— continued.
William Morris (poet) The Artist
Haystacks The Artist
Psyche Purchased hy the President and Council of the Royal
Academy., under the terms of the Chantrey Bequest., and lent hy
them.
Sir J. E. Millais, Bart, R.A Sir J. E. Millias, Bart.., R.A.
Matthew Arnold (poet; born 1822. Inspector of schools,
1851; Professor of Poetry, Oxford, 1857-67) The Artist
Love and Death The Artist
Sir Frederick Leighton, Bart., P.R.A....>S'7r Frederick Leighton., Bart.
The Angel of Death Samuel Barlow, Esq.
Hope The Artist
Alfred Tennyson, D.C.L. (Poet Laureate) The Artist
G. F. Watts, Fsq., R.A Sir Wm. Bowman, Bart.
Love and Life The Artist
Earl Lytton (^“Owen Meredith.” Born 1831 ; entered diplo-
matic service, 1849; author of “ Clytemnestra,” Ac. ;
succeeded his father, January, 1873; ambassador at
Lisbon, December, 1874; Viceroy of India, 1876)... The Artist
E. Burne Jones, Esq., A. R.A E. B. Jones, Esq., A. R.A.
Carrara Mountains Sir Horace Davey
Mount Ararat William Carver, Esq.
Algernon Charles Swinburne (poet; born 1837) The Artist
Watchman! What of the Night? Mrs. Dyson Perrins
Sir William Bowman, Bart Sir William Bowman, Bart.
Philip HERMOGENfes Calderon, R.A.
The Artist
270
271
272
273
Una and the Red Cross Knight William Carver, Esq.
VAL C. PRINSEP, A.R.A.
At the Golden Gate City of Manchester
FORD MADOX BROWN
The Coat of Many Colours J. F. Hutton, Esq.
R. W. MACBETH, A.R.A.
The Sodden Fen //. Harker, Esq.
MARK FISHER
On the Cam C. J. Gcdloway, Esq.
J. AUMONIER
A Suffolk Marsh John Galloway, Jun., Esq.
t:*
VICAT COLE, R.A.
A. G. Sandeman, Esq.
Summer Raix
C. E. Lees, Esq.
.. Samuel Armitage, Esq.
.. Samuel Armitage, Esq.
James Ilouldsivorth, Esq.
Waiting for the Ferry
A Pastoral
A Pastoral (the companion)
School Revisited
C. H. POINGDESTRE
Mrs. C. Tarratl
Roman Cattle Market
PETER GRAHAM, R.A,
A Mountain Road
C. W. COPE, R.A.
Contemplation .' Mrs. James Raddijfe
“ Struck with deep joy,
Silent with swimming sense ; gaze till all doth seem
Less gross than bodily : and of such hues
As veil the Almighty Spirit, when yet He makes
Spirits perceive his presence.” — Coleridge.
F. A. WINKPIELD
The Thames at Greenwich The Artist
GALLERV No. 3.
ARTHUR H. MARSH
278 Heigho ! the MTnd and the Rain John Roger son, Esq.
MARCUS STONE, R.A.
279 The Lost Bird City of Manchester
274
275
P. H. CALDERON, R.A.
Home after Victory E. llallam. Esq.
Home they brought her AVarrior Dead Angus Holden, Esq.
“ Home they brought her warrior dead.
She nor swoon’d nor utter’d crj%
All her maidens, watching, said,
‘She must weep, or she will die.’
“Rose a nui'se of ninety years.
Set his child upon her knee :
Like summer tempest came her tears :
‘Sweet, my child, I live for thee.’ ”
Ten nyson.
276 An Incident of the AVar in La A^endee C. F. II. Bolckow, Esq.
277 ' OUTLAM’ED
The Artist
J. LAMONT BRODIE
i
1
!
2^9 The Mighty Fallen,
C. W. WYLLIB
Sydney Caaile^ Esq.
IM
Q. D. LESLIE, R.A.
290 Pot-pourri (rose leaves and lavender) T. 11. Ismay^ Esq.
291 Fortunes William Wariny, Esq.
“ For maiden tongues of love will talk,
And all their fancies turn on love ;
And when we pulled the tender stalk,
And the fair flowers about it wmve,
And flung it in the tiny torrent,
‘ This he, and this is I,’ we cried,
‘ As fare her flowers by wind and current.
To each shall weal or woe betide.’ ”
At the Fountain Colonel Hargreaves
ARTHUR H. MARSH
The Widower //. Boddington^ Esq.
J. W. OAKES, AR.A.
The Last Gleam The Artist
J. MACWHIRTER, A.R.A.
Fisherman’s Haven Charles Moxon., Esq.
FRANK DIOKSEE, A.R.A.
Evangeline W. II. Greenfield^ Esq.
“Vainly Evangeline strove with words and caresses to cheer
him.” — Longfdlow.
SIR F. LEIGHTON, P.R.A.
296a The Sluggard The Artist
S. ONSLOW FORD
296b Dirge The Artist
GALLERY No. 4
GALLERY No. 4
An Oyster Supper
Corporation of Nottingham
T. FAED, R.A,
Farewell to Erin
A New War to an Old Soldier
iindreio Knowles, jttn., Esg.
James Taylor, Es(i,
F. W. W. TOPHAM
Convent of San Francesco
J. C. Ilaslam, Es<[.
The Forester’s Family
li. Hurst, Esq.
W. P. FRITH, R.A.
Sir Roger de Coverley at the Saracen’s Head
J. C. HORSLEY, R.A.
The Pet of the Common
James Taylor, Esq.
S. G. Holland, Esq.
The Skipper Ashore
T. FAED, R.A. •
The Seamstress
S. CARTER
Young Foxes
H. WOODS. A.R.A.
The Market Place at the Foot of the Rialto
James Jardine, Esq,
Col. Hargreaves,
Louis Huth, Esq.
W. H. Houldsworth, Esq., M.P
Polly Peach um
MRS. ALMA TADEMA,
IVie Artist
Put in the Corner
W. C. T. DOBSON, R.A.
Edwin Hilton, Esq
At the Fountain
L. ALMA TADEMA, R.A.
E. Gamhart, Esq.
S. Joshua, Esq.
Holbrook Gaskell, Esq.
. . . William Imrie, Esq.
Henry Mason, Esq-
Baron Schroder
The Painter’s Studio . . . .
The Apodyterium
Rose of all the Roses ..
Pomona Festival
An Oleander
Festival of the Vintage
3
GALLERY No. 4.
L. ALMA TADEMA, R.A.
■continued.
The Parting Kiss
The Sculptor’s Studio....
Ave C^sar, 10 Saturnalia
Hide and Seek
The Siesta
..Henry Mason^ Esq.
...E. Gamhart, Esq.
Mrs. Dyson Perrins
..John Fielden.^ Esq.
..James Orrock, Esq.
Squally Weather on the Maes
KEELEY HALSWELLE
Autumn — Woods below Streatley
E. Atkinson^ Esq.
WILLIAM ROBINSON
Upper Eskdale
G. H. BOUGHTON, A.R.A.
Rose Standish (the Puritan Maiden) Benjamin Armitage^ Esq.
A New England Witch Col. Hargreaves
C. E. PERUGINI
The Loom William Imrie., Esq.
SIMEON SOLOMON
Hosanna! .' J. F. Hutton., Esq.
W. P. FRITH, R.A.
Sweet Ann Page G. C. DewJmrst^ Esq
T. ARMSTRONG
A Music Piece Joseph Walker^ Esq.
C. E. PERUGINI
Fresh Lavender Wakefield Christy., Esq.
MRS. ALMA TADEMA
Settling a Difference W. H. Tate., Esq.
L. ALMA TADEMA, R.A.
A Question Mrs. Schlesinger
J. R. HERBERT, R.A.
King Lear Disinheriting Cordelia Edward Chapman., Esq.
Lear. So young, and so untender ?
Cordelia. So young, my lord, and true.
Lear. Let it be so. Thy truth then be thy dower.
For by the sacred radiance of the sun ;
The Artist
Here I disclaim all my paternal care.
Propinquity and property of blood.
And as a stranger to my heart and me
Hold thee, from this, for ever. — Act. 1, sc. 1.
Weary
Merton R. CoteSy Rsq., F.G.S.
The Gleaner
G. C. Dewhursty Esq.
F. GOODALL, R.A,
Song of the Nubian Slave
J. L. Kennedy, Esq.
J. D. WATSON
The Yeoman’s Wedding
Henry Whitehead, Esq.
VICAT COLE, R.A.
Lord Brassey
Ripening Sunbeams
Half-veiled in golden light of shimmering aii’
The landscape stretches wondrously fair,
No paling beauty anywhere ;
Nature is in her prime.
In richest robes the hills and woods appear,
The lakes and springs lie motionless and clear,
Ruled by the faire.st Queen of all the year.
Beautiful harvest time.”
■Poems of England.
W. BRIGHT MORRIS
x\fter the Day’s Work
Richard Hurst, Esq.
...T. Burnandy Esq.
Stolen Glances
The Duenna’s Return
FREDERICK MORGAN
Benjamin Armitage, Esq
The Emigrant’s Departure
W. P. FRITH. R.A.
English Merry Making in the Olden Times
“ When the merry bells ring round.
And the jocund rebecks sound.
To many a youth and many a maid,
Dancing in the chequered shade ;
And young and old come forth to play.
On a sunshine holiday.” — Milton's “ L' Allegro.
Mrs. Bolckoio
The Artist
SoLVA Harbour
The Artist
H. Stacey Marks, Esq., R.A,
GALLERY No. 4.
281
34'
W. P. FRITH, R.A.
Before Dinner at Boswell’s Lodgings in Bond Street, 1769
W. Tatiersall, Esq.
“ Present— Johnson, Garrick, Goldsmith, Reynolds, Murphy, Bicker-
staff, Davies and Boswell. Garrick played round Dr. Johnson with a
fond vivacity, taking hold of the breasts of his coat, and, looking up in
his face with a lively archness, complimented him on the good health he
seemed then to enjr>y, while the sage, shaking his head, beheld him with
a gentle complacency. One of the company not being come at the
appointed time. Goldsmith, to divert the tedious minutes, strutted
about bragging of his dress, and I believe was seriously vain of it, for
his mind was wonderfully prone to such impressions. ‘ Well, let me tell
you,’ said he, ‘when my tailor brought home my bloom-coloured coat, he
said, “Sir, I have a favour to beg of you : when anybody asks you who
made your clothes, be pleased to mention John Filby, at the Harrow,
in Water Lane.” ’ ” — See Boswell's “ Life of Johnson.”
H. W. B. DAVIS, R.A.
348 Contentment
351
352
.A. C. Armitage, Esq.
W. F. FRITH, R.A.
Ramsgate Sands lEr Majesty the Queen
CHARLES J. LEWIS.
A Sanfoin Field Charles lVi?m, Esq.
“ When shepherds pipe on oaten straws
And merry larks are ploughman’s clocks.”
SIR J. E. MILLAIS, BART., R.A.
T. Oldham Barlow, Esq., R.A T. J. Jones, Esq.
W. P. FRITH, R.A.
Hogarth Arrested as a Spy, and taken before the
Governor of Calais Mrs. Thomas Agnew
“ Hogarth has run a great risk since the peace ; he went to France,
accompanied by some friends, and was so imprudent as to be taking a
.sketch of the drawbridge at Calais. He was seized and carried to the
Governor, where he was obliged to prove his vocation by producing
several caricatures, &c., such as would by no means serve the purpose of
an engineer. He was told by the Governor that, had not the peace been
actually signed, he should have hung him immediately on the ramparts.”
— Horace Walyolts Letters.
Coming of Age in the Olden Time Edward Chapman, Esq.
R. W. MACBETH, A.R.A.
A Fen Lode H. Marker Esq.
J. MACWHIRTER, A.R.A.
Nature’s Mirror J. W. Haigh, Esq.
GALLERY No. 4.
The Duenna and her Cares
Mrs. James Radcliffe
A Jersey Family
II. Graves^
VICAT COLE, R.A,
Haytime
A. C. Armitage^
HAYNES- WILLIAMS
Ars Longa, Vita Brevis
“ Short life ebbs fast ;
But still the pathos of the saddened eye
Strains at the art, that shall outlive the life ;
And, painter more than lover, he that soon
Shall pass away and leave the loved, long art.
Gazes, with dreamy soul upon his work.” — Old Play.
E. CROFTS, A.R.A.
On the Evening of the Battle of Waterloo. Corporation of Liverpool
“ At Genappe, the first important defile through which the French
army retired, an immense number of carriages and wagons of all kinds
had been collected together, which presented a rich booty to the Prus-
sians, but the most valuable and most interesting object consi.sted of
Napoleon’s travelling carriage, which, with all its contents, fell into the
hands of the 15th Regiment. He himself had only quitted it a few
minutes previously in such haste as to leave behind his hat, which was
found inside. ” —8ce Siborne's “ History of the War in Prance and Belgium.”
E. BLAIR LEIGHTON
J. W. Radcliffe^ Esq.
Joseph J. Ar milage^ Esq,
The Morning Bath
BRITON RIVIERE, R.A.
In Manus Tuas, Domine ! Abraham Haworth., Esq.
Daniel in the Lions’ Den T. II. Ismay, Esq.
Circe and the Companions of Ulysses Mr. J. K. Orost
“ She touched them with a rod that wrought
Their transformation far past human wants ;
Swines’ .snouts, swines’ bodies, took they, bristles, grunts.
But still retain’d the souls they had before.
Which made them mourn their bodies’ change the more.”
Chapman's ‘‘Odyssey” (Book X.)
J. HEYS DAVIES.
Under the Opening Eyelids of the Morn ... G. J. Galloway, Esq.
I
GAl.LEUY No. 4.
BRITON RIVIERE, RA.
367 i A Stern Chase is always a Long Chase... Humphrey Roberts^ Esq.
368 j Ulysses AND Argus Samuel Ar milage, Esq.
“ And upon Argus came the death-fate drear,
Just having seen Odysseus in the twentieth year.”
— Worsley's Odyssey.''’
C. E. HOLLOWAY
On the Thames James Kay, Esq.
BRITON RIVIERE, R.A.
Playfellows Jesse Haworth, Esq.
His Only Friend Jesse IlawoUh, Esq.
The King and His Satellites F. W. Grafton Esq.
HERBERT JOHNSTONE
A Portrait The Artist
R. CATON-WOODVILLE
Maiwand — Saving the Guns Corporation of Liveiyool
The defeat of the British and native troops at the battle of
Maiwand, Afghanistan, October, 1880, will long be remembered as an
instance of the folly of under-estimating the strength of an enemy.
Here a contingent of the Royal Horse Artillery, after performing all
that bravery could achieve against overwhelming numbers, is compelled
to retreat, bearing away dead and wounded (men and officers). But for
the cavalry making repeated charges in order to cover the retreat,
notwithstanding the most desperate valour, the heroic little band
would not have accomplished the brilliant feat of saving the guns.
H. WOODS, A.R.A.
Venetian Fan Sellers James Barrow, Esq.
G. F. WATTS, R.A.
Little Red Riding Hood Sir W. Bowman, Bart.
BRITON RIVIERE, R.A.
An Anxious Moment William Agnew, Esq.
ANDREW C. GOW, A.R.A.
Cromwell at Dunbar Purchased by the President and Council of the
Royal Academy, under the terms of the Chantrey Bequest, and lent by them.
“ The Scotch army is shivered to utter ruin, rushes in tumultuous
wreck hither, thither The Lord General made a
halt, says Hodgson, sang the 117th Psalm, till our horse could gather
for the chase.” — Carlyle, “ Cromioell’s Letters."
BASIL BRADLEY
379 May Time on the Thames Edward Brook, Esq.
m
284
GALLERY No. 4.
W. Q. ORCHARDSON, RA.
380 Mariage de Convenance . Alfred Shuttle worth, Esq.
381 Charles Moxon, Esq Charles Moxon, Esq.
382 Housekeeping in the Honeymoon Charles Churchill, Esq.
383 The Market Girl from the Lido Mrs. Richard Johnson
384 Hard Hit ! Ihmphrey Roberts, Esq.
385 Portrait of a Lady The Artist
386 A Tender Chord Humphrey Roberts, Esq.
“Have I forgot the words ? Faith ! they are sadder than I thought they were.”
Alone J. M. Keiller, Esq.
388 Napoleon on Board H.M.S. “ Bellerophon,” July 23rd,
1815, OFF Ushant; leaving France. — Purchased
by the President and Council of the Royal Academy
i under the terms of the Chantrey Bequest, and lent by
I them.
“ Napoleon remained on deck great part of the morning. He cast
many a melancholy look at the coast of France.” — Mentland's Narrative.
A. F. MUTRIB
389 Roses Sir W. Cunliffe Brookes, Bart., M.P.
OTTO WEBER
390 Springtime Baron J. II. Schroder
EDWIN ELLIS
391 The Haven Under the Hill City of Manchester
E. LONG, RA.
392 Henry Irving, as Richard, Duke of Glo’ster. . . Baroness Burdett-Coutts
T. FAED, RA.
393 Where is my good little Girl? F. W. Grafton, Esq.
391 Worn Out Daniel Thwaites, Esq.
395 The Poor, the Poor Man’s Friend Duchess of Montrose
“ The poor, the poor man’s friend,
The blind man’s at the door.”
396 Baith Faither and Mither C. F. 11. Bo'ckoiv, Esq.
“ He was faither and mither, and a’ things tae me.” — Ballantine.
397 The Silken Gown C. F. II. Bolckow, Esq.
“ And ye shall walk in silk attire
And siller ha’e to spare,
Gin ye’ll consent to l)e his bride
Nor think o’ Donald mair.
Oh ! wha wad buy a silken gown
Wi’ a poor broken heart ?
Or what’s t’ me a siller crown,
Gin frae my love I part ?”
GALLERY No. 4.
398
400
400a
SCULPTURE.
SIR F. LEIGHTON, P.R.A.
The Python Slayer Eo^al Academy
VICAT COLE, R.A.
Iffley Mill — A Windy Day Alfred Shuttlewortk, Esq.
H. HERKOMER, AR.A
Portrait of His Father The Artist
R. BEAVIS
The Charcoal Burner R. M. Knowles.^ Esq.
HAMO THORNYCROPT, A.R.A.
Teucer (bronze) Purchased hy the President and Council
of the Royal Academy^ under the terms of the Chantrey
Bequest.^ and lent hy them.
GALLERY No. 5.
GALLERY No. 5
W. H. BARTLETT
Practising for the Swimming xMatcii II. Whitehead.^ Esq.
J. W. OAKES, A.R.A.
Glen Muich, Aberdeenshire II. II. Goddard^ Esq.
E. BARCLAY
The Steps at Ana Capri Lord Brassey
SIR J. E. MILLAIS, R.A.
The Escape of a Heretic, 1559 W. II. Ilouldsworth, Esq, M.P.
“ At Valladolid, this Friday before Good Friday, A.D. 1584, before
the Liccutiato Cristoval Rodriquez, Commissary of the Holy Inquisi-
tion, appears Fray Juan Romero, monk of the Order of Saint Dominic,
in the convent of the said Order in the said city, familiar of the said
Holy Inquisition, and having sworn to speak the truth, saith, ‘ That
having been assigned, together with Fray Diego Nuho, familiar of the
said Holy Inquisition, as confessor to Maria J uana di Acuna y Villajos,
late in close prison of the said Holy Inquisition, convict, as an obsti-
nate heretic, and left to be delivered to the secular arm at the Act
of Faith appointed to be held in the said city, before His Most
Catholic Majesty our Lord the King, this day, he was yesterday at
noon in the prison of the said prisoner, together with a person
unknown, whom he supposed to be the said Fray Diego, but saw not
his face by reason of his wearing his hood drawn forwai’d, when he
was of a sudden set upon, gagged and bound, by the said person
unknown, and his habit stripped off and put upon the said prisoner,
who so passed out of the said prison with the said person unknown, nor
hath since been discovered by the deponent or the other familiars of
the said Holy Inquisition in the said city.’ ” — From “ Documentos
relativos {( los procesos por la Inquisicion de Valladolid.”
W. H. WEIGALL
The Marquis of Salisbury, K.G. (Prime Minister)... of Exeter
The Earl of Beaconsfield, K.G. (d. 1881) Marq;uis of Exeter
HANSON WALKER
My Lady of Castle wood C. E. Lees, Esq.
FRANK HOLL, R.A.
General Viscount Wolseley, G.C.B., G.C.M.G Viscoimt Wolseley
John Tenniel, Esq William Ayiiew, Esq.
Sir Henry C. Kawlinson, K.C.B., F.R.S Lady Rawlinson
Lord Winmarleigii Committee of the Royal Albert Asylum
H.R.H. The Prince of Wales The Master and Benchers of the
Middle Temple
Samuel Cousins, Esq., R.A The Artist
i
i
GALLERY No. 5.
FRANK HOLL, "R. A. —Continued.
Lord Overstone Lord Wantage
The Right Hon. J. Chamberlain, M.P Sir Charles Dilke^ Bart.
The Hon. Sir James Bacon (Vice-Chancellor) Sir James Bacon
G. A. STOREY, A.R.A.
Little Swansdown R. M. Knovdes^ Esq.
JOHN SCOTT
The Apostate Thomas Fair hurst, Esq.
JAMES T. LINNELL
Firs and Furze R. Ilohson, Esq.
F. D. HARDY
Reading the Will George Gurney, Esq.
E. J. POYNTER, R.A.
Proserpina IF. Brockhanh, Esq.
SIR J. E. MILLAIS, BART, R.A.
The Gambler’s Wife Humphrey Roberts, Esq.
JAMES T. LINNELL
An Autumn Evening James Jardine, Esq.
F. R. PICKERSGILL, R.A.
Christiana and her Companions Thomas Barnes, Esq.
PETER GRAHAM, R.A.
Our Northern Walls J. Ilouldsworth, Esq.
J. E. HODGSON. RA.
The Barber’s Shop, Tangier James Taylor, Esq.
SIR JOHN GILBERT, R.A.
Brigands Dividing Booty James Jardine, Esq.
E. LONG, R.A.
Easter Offerings Baroness Burdett-Coutts
VICAT COLE, R.A.
Loch Scavaig, Isle of Skye Col. Hargreaves
“ A while their route they silent made,
As men who stalk for mountain deer,
Till the good Bruce to Ronald said,
‘ St. Mary ! what a scene is, here !
I’ve traversed many a mountain strand.
Abroad, and in my native land.
And it has been my lot to tread
Where safety more than pleasure led ;
Thus, many a waste I’ve wandered o’ei',
Clombe many a crag, cross’d many a moor.
But, by my halidome,
A scene so rude, so wild as this.
Yet so sublime in barrenness.
Ne’er did my wandering footsteps press.
Where’er I happ’d to roam.’ ”
— Scott's “ Lord of the Isles," canto iii., stanza xiii.
SIR P. LEIGHTON, BART., P.R.A.
Greek Girls by the Sea Right Hon. J. Chamtferlain^ M.P.
Elisha Raising the Son of the Shunammite ...Mrs. Dyson Perrins
Day-Dreams James Mason, Esq.
DAVID MURRAY, A.R.S.A.
’Twixt Croft and Creel Corporation of Oldham
FRANK DICKSEE, A.R.A.
The House Builders. (The Portraits of Sir W. E. Gregory
and the Hon. LadyWelby Gregory) Sir W. W. Gregory
PETER GRAHAM, R.A.
Rocks and an Emerald Sea Col. Hargreaves
SIR F. LEIGHTON, BART., P.R.A.
Hercules Wrestling ^YITH Death for the Body of
Alcestis Sir B. Samuelson, Bart, M.P.
Amarilla Rev. IV. T. Houldsworth
Summer Moo n ; Al fred Morrison, Esq.
Pastoral Thomas Ashton, Esq.
Cleoboulos Instructing .his Daughter Cleobouline
E. X. Buxton, Esq.
KEELEY HALSWELLE
Inverlochy Castle and Ben Nevis A. C. Armitage, Esq.
“ Something of the old ancestral pride it keeps,
Tho’ fallen from its earlier place and circumstance.”
F. DICKSEE, A.R.A.
Romeo and Juliet C. Churchill, Esq.
Rom. “ Farewell, farewell, one kiss, and I’ll descend.”
P. R. MORRIS, A.R.A.
The Woodland Pool C. E. Lees, Esq.
B. W. LEADER, A.R.A.
The End of the Day Col. A. II. Brown, M.P.
ERSKINE NICOL, A.R.A.
His Legal Adviser II . Dewhurst, Esq.
P. MACQUOID
“ La belle Dame sans Merci ” The Artist
i
I
I
GALLERY No. 5.
289
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
J. H. E. PARTINGTON
The Ramsey Wreckers A. Laivrence^ Esq.
ISABEL DACRE
Passion Flower The Artist
C. J. LEWIS
A Mill Race II. W. Elliott, Esq.
H. CLARANCE WHAITE
The Awakening of Chihstian The Artist
W. H. BARTLETT
Return from the Seal Hunt J. L. Browne, Esq.
JAMES SANT, R.A.
Mrs. Anstruther Thomson Captain Thomson
Daughters of A. Wilson, Esq A. Wilson, Esq.
Her Most Gracious Majesty the Queen,
WITH HER Grandchildren, the Princes
Albert Victor and George, and Prin-
cess Victoria of W eles... H er Majesty the Queen
The Morning’s Post The Artist
Adversity Sir William Eden, Bart.
WYKE BAYLISS, F.S.A.
Interior of Chartres Cathedral J. Garner Marshall, Esq.
J. HOUGHTON HAGUE
A Lancashire Ornithologist W. G. llwmpson. Esq.
E. H. FAHEY
On the Yare — Evening C. Coombe, Esq.
FRANK DICKSEE, A.R.A.
The Symbol Charles Galqnn, Esq.
“Is it nothing to you, all ye that pass by ?”
FRANK WALTON
“Leaves Have their Time to Fall.” J. C. Bowring, Esq.
J. B. BURGESS, A.R.A.
The Beggar Students of Salamanca A. Shuttleworth, Esq.
E. H. FAHEY
Filby Broad Hon. Charles W. Mills
H. HERKOMER, A.R.A.
The Last Muster W. C. Quilter, Esq., M.P.
KEELEY HALSWELLE
Pangbourne — Early Morning C. F. Cnndy, Esq.
Gathering Clouds, Medmenham C. F. Cundy, Esq.
GALLERY No. 5.
SIR J. E. MILLAIS, BART., R.A.
The Fkixge of the Moor T. II. Ismar/, Esq,
Asleep J. C. Harter^ Esq,
The S0NAMBULI8T Mrs. Richard Johnson
Awake Holbrook Gaskell, Esq.
Bride of Lammermoor Angus Holden Esq.
Dr. Fra.ser (Late Bishop of Manchester) Mrs. Fraser
Boyhood of Raleigh James Reiss, Esq.
Sir James Paget, Bart., F.R.S The Almoners of St. Bartholomew's
The North-West PASSiGE C. F. II. Bolckow, Esq.
“ It might be done, and Engl uid should do it.”
Sir Henry Thompson Sir Henry Thompson
The Vale of Rest Henry Tate, Esq.
“ Where the wicked cease from troubling, and the weary are at rest.”
His Eminence Cardinal Newman Duke of Norfolk
Greenwich Pensioners, at Nelson’s Tomb, in the Crypt
OF St. Paul’s Humphrey Roberts, Esq.
C. NAPIER HEMY
Old Putney Bridge City of Manchester
WILLIAM MEREDITH
Herring Boats Unloading The Artist
JAMES SMART, R-S.A.
The Pass of Lenny, Pertshire Albert Institute, Dundee
B. W. LEADER, AR.A.
Wild Wales Benjamin Armitage, Esq.
R. GAY SOMERSET
Landscape J. Eaton, Esq,
WYKE BAYLISS, F.S.A.
Interior of St. Mark’s, Venice Corporation of Nottingham
J. W. NORTH
* * * * J. II. xidamson, Esq.
“ See’st how my flowers be spread,
Dy’d in lily white, and crimson red.”
GALLERY No. 6,
493 i
GALLERY No. 6.— THE CENTRAL HALL.
JOHN COLLIER
Dr. W. B. Carpenter (Registrar 1856-79).
Senate of the University of London
H. W. PICKERSGILL, R.A.,
(d. 1875.)
Professor Owen Mrs. Owen
E. J. POYNTER, R.A.
A Visit to .^sculapius...P?^ rcAasecZ hy the President and
Council of the Royal Academy^ under the terms of
the Chantrey Bequest, and lent hy them.
“ In time long past, when in Dianae’s chase,
A bramble bush prickt Venus in the foot,
Okie .^sculapius healpt her heavie case.
Before the hurt had taken anye roote.” —
Thos. Watson (“Arber’s Reprint.”)
The Dragon of Wantley Earl of Wharncliffe
“ The fight between More, of More Hall, and the Dragon of Wantley.”
Atalanta’s Race Earl of Wharncliffe
“ Atalanta, not willing to lose her virgin’s estate, made it a law to
all suitors that they should run a race with her in a public place, and
if they failed to overcome her should die unrevenged ; and thus many
brave men perished. At last came Milanion, who, outrunning her with
the help of three golden apples given him by Venus, gained the virgin
and wedded her.” — Morris's “ Earthly Paradise."
SIR P. GRANT, P.R.A.
Edward Geoffrey, K.G., 14th Earl of Derby (born 1799 ;
died 1869. Prime Minister) Earl of Derby
SIR THOMAS LAWRENCE, P.R.A.
(d. 1830.)
The Earl of Aberdeen (Prime Minister) Earl of Aberdeen
SIR P. GRANT, P.R.A.
Earl Russell (Prime Minister) Countess Russell
SIR THOMAS LAWRENCE, P.R.A., d. 1830.
Field-Marshal the Duke of Wellington Duke of Wellington
E. J. POYNTER, R.A.
Perseus and Andromeda Earl of Wharncliffe
Nausicaa and her Companions Playing at Ball... Earl of Wharncliffe
“ The Queen now, for the upstroke, struck the ball
Quite wide off the other maids, and made it fall
Amidst the whirlpools.” — Chapman's Homer's Odyssey."
D. LAUGEE
Sir John G. Shaw-Lefevre (Vice-Chancellor 1842-62).
Senate of the University of London
R. LEHMANN
Sir Henry Bessemer
E. ARMITAGE, RA.
Julian the Apostate Presiding at a Conference of
Sectarians Corporation of Liverpool
“ Ju’.ian, who understood and derided their theological disputes,
invited to the palace the leaders of the hostile sects, that he might
enjoy the agreeable spectacle of their furious encounters. The clamour
of controversy sometimes provoked the Emperor to exclaim, Hear me .
the Franks have heard me and the Alemanni.’ But he soon discovered
that he was now engaged with more obstinate and implacable enemies ;
and though he exerted the powers of oratory to persuade them to live
in concord, or at least in peace, he was perfectly satished before he dis-
missed them from his presence that he had nothing to fear from the
union of the Christians.”— ^i66on’s Decline and Fall of the Roman
Empire^'" chap.
XXlll.
G. F. WATTS, R A
RY, K.G. (died 1885) The. Artist
ARTiNEAU Manchester Xew College^ London
Lady Siemens
Lieutenant, commanded the A aval
the Indian Mutiny)
JOHN COLLIER
The Right Hon. Sir George Jessel (died 1883,
the Rolls) The Senate of
PHILIP WBSTCOTT
Sir Robert Rawlinson C.B. (Sanitary Commissioner to the
British Army at the Siege of Sebastopol) Sir R. Rawhmon.
11. Graves^ Esq.
1
I
^ /¥?-:y -inilE^FQ,
GALLERY No. 6.
293
C. B. HALLE
Mr. Charles Hall^, LL.D.
Charles Halle, Esq.
513
Reiss
SIR FREDERIC LEIGHTON, BART., P RA.
Stuart Hodgson, Esg.
“A triumphal procession held every ninth year at Thebes in
honour of Apollo, and to commemorate a victory of the Thebans over
the Bohans of Arne. The name was derived from the laurel branches
carried by those who took part in the festival, the laurel, or more
properly the bay, being sacred to Apollo. The procession is led by a
youthful priest, called the Daphnephoros (the laurel bearer) ; before
him a boy, his kinsman, bears a symbolic standard called the ‘ Kopo,’
and indicating the sun, moon, and stars. Behind the Daphnephoros
three lads carry a trophy of golden armour ; they are followed by a
choir of Theban maidens, who, crowned with laurel, and each bearing
an olive branch, sing the hymn to Apollo, under the direction of tlie
chorus leader. The procession is closed by boys, carrying votive
tripods. In the valley below is seen the town of Thebes.”— ProcZws,
“ Chrestomath,” p. ii.
H. HBRKOMBR, A.R.A.
The Right Hon. Viscount Cross, G.C.B. Rt. Hon. W. H. Smith, M.P.
SIR J. B. MILLAIS, BART., R A
Victory, oh. Lord ! (Aaron and Hnr holding up the hands
of Moses)
“ So Joshua did as Moses had said to him, and fought with Amalek :
and Moses, Aaron, and Hur went up to the top of the hill. And it
came to pass, when Moses held up his hand, that Israel prevailed : and
when he let down his hand, Amalek prevailed. But Moses’s hands were
heavy ; and they took a stone, and put it under him, and he sat
thereon ; and Aaron and Hur stayed up his hands, the one on the one
side, and the other on the other side ; and his hands were steady until
the going down of the sun.”- Exodus, xvii., 10-12.
PROFESSOR A. LB GROS
515 Thk Right Hon. Sir G. Grey, Bart., K.C.B Earl of Northbrook
J. CALLCOTT HORSLEY, R-A.
516 IsAMBARD Kingdom Brunel (the Engineer of the Great Western
Railway, &c.)
i
G. F. WATTS, R.A.
517 j Thom\s Carlyle (Essayist and historian ; d. 1881) The Artis
’ JOHN LUCAS.
518 George Stephenson (the Inventor of the Locomotive Steam
I Engine, represented as standing on Chat Moss. Born
1 1781 ; died 1848) G. R. Stephenson, Esq.
y
SIR J. D. LINTON. P.R.I.
Victorious ! Charles J. Jacoby, Esq.
H. W. PICKERSGILL, R A.
(d. 1875.)
Sir Robert Peel, Bart. (Prime Minister) II. Graves, Esq.
SIR J. D. LINTON, P.RI.
The Banquet Charles J. Jacoby, Esq.
E. LONG, R.A.
The Earl of Iddesleigh (Sir Stafford Xorthcote) Countess of Iddesleigh
SIR J. E. MILLAIS, BART., R.A.
The Earl of Beaconsfield (Prime Minister. Died 1881).
lit. lion. ir. II. Smith, M.P
G. RICHMOND, RA-
Right Hon. W. H. Smith, M.P Right Hon. W. II. Smith, M.P.
SIR J. E. MILLAIS, BART., R.A.
Marquis of Salisbury, K.G. (Prime Minister)
Right Hon. W. II. Smith, M.P.
- ' F. WINTERHALTER
Her Majesty The Queen Hei' Majesty
H.R.H. The Prince Consort Her Majesty
H. T. WELLS, R A
Earl Spencer, K.G Earl Spencer, K.G.
SIR J. E. MILLAIS, BART., R.A.
Right Hon. W. E. Gladstone, M.P. (Prime Minister)
Sir Charles Tennant, Bart.
Right Hon. John Bright, M.P William uigimv. Esq.
T. H. MUNNS, 1883.
The Marquis of Hartington, M.P Manchester Refomn Club
SIR J. D. LINTON. P.RJ.
The Benediction Charles J. Jacoby, Esq.
W. M. TWEEDIE (d. 1878.)
William Cavendish, Duke of Devonshire, K.G. (Chancellor
1836-56) The Senate of the University of London.
JOHN LUCAS
Robert Stephenson (the eminent Engineer of the Britannia
Tubular Bridge over the Menai Straits. Born 1803 ;
died 1859) G. R. Stephenson, Esq.
GALLERY No. 6.
295
B. LONG, R.A.
535 Gods and their Makers Jme Haworth^ Esq.
' “All know what monsters Egypt venerates.
It worships crocodiles, or it adores
The snake-gorged ibis; and the sacred ape
Graven in gold is seen. . . . Whole cities pray
To cats and fishes, or the dog invoke.”
— Juvenal (Satire XV. 1. Translated by Sir Frederick Pollock, Bart.)
G. P. WATTS, R A.
536 i Viscount Sherbrooke (^Robert Lowe) The Artist
537 Lord Lyndhurst (d. 1863) Executors late C. II. Rickards, Esq.
538 ^ The Duke of Argyll, K.G The Artist
I SIR J. E. MILLAIS, BART., RA.
539 : George Grote, D.C.L., F.R.S. (Vice Chancellor, 1862-71 ;
cl. 1871) Senate of the University of London
E. LONG, R.A.
540 The Babylonian Marriage Market
j Trustees of the Royal Holloway College
1 “ Herodotus records one of their customs, which, whether in jest or
earnest, he declares to be the wisest he ever heard of. This was their
I wife-auction, by which they managed to find husbands for all their
I young women. The greatest beauty was put up first, and then knocked
! down to the highest bidder ; then the next in the order of comeliness,
j and so on to the damsel who was equidistant between beauty and
plainness, who was given away gratis. Then the least plain was put up,
and knocked down to the gallant who would marry her for the smallest
consideration, and so on till even the plainest was got rid of to some
cyrical worthy, who decidedly preferred lucre to looks. By transferring
to the scale of the ill-favoured the prices paid for the fair beauty was
made to endow ugliness, and the rich man’s taste was the poor man’s
gain.” — Ilcrodotns ” {by George C. Swayne, M.A.)
G. RICHMOND, R.A.
541 Earl Granville, K.G. (Chancellor of the University of
London, 1887) Senate of the University of London
542
SIR B. LANDSEER, R.A. (d. 1873.)
Scene in Braemar, Highland Deer, Ac C, F. II. Bolckoiv, Esq.
! JOHN COLLIER
543 I Charles Robert Darwin, F.R.S., LL.D., d. 1882 (Author of
I “ The Origin of Species,” Ac.) IF. E. Darwin, Esq.
544 i Thomas Henry Huxley, LL.D., D.C.L., F.R.S The Artist
GALLERY No. 6.
. B. LONG, RA.
Diana or Christ? D. Thwaites^ Esq.
“ Let her cast the incense, but one grain, and she is free.” The
scene is laid in Ephesus, at the end of the .stadium, which might have
been used as an amphitheatre.
Lord Lawrence (born 1811 ; Commissioner of the Sutlej,
1846 ; of the Pimjanh, 1849 ; checked the Mutiny at
Lahore, July, 1857 ; Viceroy of India, December,
1863 ; resigned September, 1868 ; made Raron, 27th
of March, 1869 ; first Cliairman of the London School
Board, November, 1870-73 ; died 1879) The Artist
The Very Rev. Henry Milman (Dean of St. Paul’s, d. 1868)
Rev. W. II. Milman
John Stuart Mill (d. 1873) Sir Charles Dilhe^ Hart.
SCULPTURE.
T. WOOLNBR, R.A,
Lord Tennyson (bust, marble)
SIMONDS
Her Majesty the Queen — ( statuette)
The Artist
The Artist
SIR F. LEIGHTON, P.R.A,
Needless Alarms (bronze)
J. R. Ileseltine, Esq.
J. P. Ileseltine^ Esq.
Mercury (bronze)
Head of a Fisherman
Figure of a Little Girl
The Artist
Sir F. Leighton., Bart.
Icarus
HAMO THORNYCROFT, A.R.A,
The Artist
Study of a Head
Homer (in high relief)
Dido and ^Eneas
, The A.rtist
The Artist
ir*Hi
567
568 i
569
575
HENRY DAWSON
The Wooden Walls op Old England James Orroch^ Esq.
B. M. WARD, R.A.
Fouquier Tinville Reading the Act of Accusation to Marie
Antoinette in the Prison of the Temple ... E. Laioson^ Esq.
W. ETTY, RA.
The Bivouac of Cupids Da.vid Price ^ Esq.
B. M. WARD, R.A.
Charlotte Corday Sitting for her Portrait E. Lawson^ Esq.
JAMBS HOLLAND
The Thames at Greenwich S. G. Holland, Esq.
Venice, Sunrise S. G. Holland, Esq.
JOHN PHILLIP, R.A.
Marriage of the Princess Royal op England T. Barnes, Esq.
{For Key to this Picture, see page 298.)
S. W. COOKE, R.A.
A Crab and Lobster Shore G. C. Bewhurst, Esq.
GEORGE CHAMBERS
Off Dover H. G. Crews, Esq.
D. ROBERTS, R.A.
The River Tiber, Rome Exors. of Henry Wilson Esq.
CLARKSON STANFIELD, R.A.
The Morning after Trafalgar James Price, Esq.
On the River Texel James Houldsworth, Esq.
Shore of the Zuyder Zee James Taylor, Esq.
Coast of Normandy David Jar dine, Esq^
Port na Spania, near the Giant’s Causeway, Antrim, Coast
OF Ireland Daniel Thwaites, Esq.
“ It is related that one or more of the ships belonging to the Spanish
Armada were driven on to the coast by stress of weather, and in the
mist took the isolated rocks called the Chimney-tops for the veritable
chimneys of Dunluce Castle, and wasted their gunpowder in firing at
them. The gale increasing, they were totally wrecked in the bay,
thence called Port na Spania.”
The Wooden Walls of Old England (Hulks on the Medway)
Angus Holden, Esq.
Ol!
J
GALLERY N(\
Painted by JOHN PHILLIP, Esq., R.A.
Lady Cecilia Gordon-Lennox.
Lady Constance Villiers,
Lady Emma Stanley.
Lady Susan Murray.
Lady Victoria Noel.
Lady Susan Pelham Clinton.
The Queen.
The Prince Consort.
The Princess Royal.
Prince Frederick William.
The Prince of Wales.
Prince Alfred Ernest Albert.
Prince Arthur Patrick Albert.
Prince Leopold Duncan Albert.
Princess Alice Maud Mary.
Princess Helena Augusta Victoria.
Princess Louisa Caroline Alberta.
The King of Prussia, 1 theparents of Prince
The Queen of Prussia, ( Fred. William.
The Duke of Saxe-Coburg (brother of Prince
Consort).
Gentleman of the Suite.
Countess of Fife.
General Williams of Kars.
Lord John Russell.
Duke of Argyll.
Slarquis of Lansdowne.
Leopold, King of the Belgians.
Garter King-at-Arms.
Duke of Newcastle.
Lord Palmerston.
Duchess of Kent.
Lord Panmure.
Duchess of Sutherland.
Duchess of Cambridge.
Duke of Cambridge.
Duchess of Argyll.
Duchess of Wellington.
Princess Mary of Cambridge.
The Archbishop of Canterbury
Countess Iloenthall.
Countess Perponcher.
Earl of St. Germans.
Marquis of Breadalbane.
Earl of Clarendon.
The Roya Marriage was solemnised at the Chapel Royal, St. James’s, January 25th, 1858.
GALLERY No. 7.
299
576
0 ^ /
578
579
580
581
582
583
CLARKSON STANFIELD, R.A.- continued.
The Abandoned Earl of Northbrook
“ There waa no trace by which the name of the ship could be ascer-
tained. The wreck had evidently drifted about for many months :
clusters of shellfish had fastened about it, and long seaweeds flaunted at
its sides. But where, thought I, is the crew ? Their struggle has long
been over — they have gone down amidst the roar of the tempest — -their
bones lie whitening among the caverns of the deep. Silence, oblivion,
like the waves, have closed over them, and no one can tell the story of
their end. What sighs have been wafted after that ship ! What prayers
offered up at the deserted fireside of home ! How often has the mistress,
the wife, the mother, peered over the daily news to catch some casual
intelligence of this rover of the deep ! How has expectation darkened
into anxiety — anxiety into dread — and dread into despair. Alas ! not one
memento shall ever return for love to cherish. All that shall ever be
known is, that she sailed from her port, and was never heard of more ! ”
— Vide ‘‘ The Voyagef Washington Irving's Sketch Book.
La Chasse Mar^e C. F. H. Bolchow^ Esq.
Entrance to the Zuyder Zee F. W. Grafton^ Esq.
Dordrecht on the Maes F. W. Grafton^ Esq.
Wemyss Bay
SAM BOUGH, R.S.A.
T. DANBY
.Joseph Broome.^ Esq.
Sunset Mrs. A. A. Dewhurst
The Windmill
T. CRESWICK, R.A.
.Richard Hurst., Esq.
W. MULLER
Dredging on the Medway Col. Hargreaves
W. ETTY, R.A.
584 Andromeda Daniel Thwaites, Esq.
585 La Fleur de Lis J. S. Morgan, Esq.
E. W. COOKE, R.A.
586 I The Piazzetta, Venice C. F. II. Bolckow, Esq.
587 The Piazzetta, Venice, with the Lion Column and
the Campanile G. F. II. Bolckow, Esq.
* T. CRESWICK, R.A.
588 A Glade in Windsor Forest (the Animals painted by T. S.
i Cooper, R.A.) Charles Chapman, Esq.
JOHN PHILLIP, R.A.
589 I Al Alcazar C. F. H. Bolckoiv, Esq.
590 j II Cigarillo Holbrook Gaskell, Esq.
GALLERY Xo.
JOHN PHILLIP, R.A. — continued.
The House of Commons in 1860 (Mr. Speaker Denison in the
Chair, and Lord Palmerston Addressing the House.)
Viscountess Ossington
1. Eight Hon, Edward Ellis, M.P.
2. Eight Hon. Sir Francis T. Baring, M.P.
3. Lord H, G. Vane, M.P.
4. Eichard Cobden, Esq., M.P.
5. John Bright, Esq., M.P.
6. Lord Elcho, M.P.
7. Eight Hon. Edward Cardwell, M.P., Chan-
cellor of the Duchy of Lancaster.
8. Sir Eoundell Palmer, M.P.
9. Eight Hon. Milner Gibson, M.P., President
of the Board of Trade.
10. Eight Hon. Charles Pelham Villiers, M.P.,
President of the Poor Law Board.
11. W. Massey, Esq., M.P.
12. Viscount Palmerston, First Lord of the
Treasury.
13. Sir Denis Le Marchant, Bt.
14. Eight Hon. The Speaker.
15. Thos. Enskine May, Esq., C, B.
16. Lord Charles Eussell.
17. Mr. Lee.
Eight Hon. Sir John Pakington, M.P.
Sir Hugh McCalmont Cairns, M.P,
Col. John Wilson Patten, M.P.
Eight Hon. Sotheron Estcourt, M.P.
Lord John Manners, M.P.
Sir Edward Lytton Bulwer Lytton, Bt., M.P.
Eight Hon. Major-General J. Peel, M.P.
Lord Stanley, M.P.
Eight Hon. B. Disraeli, M.P.
Eight Hon. Spencer H. Walpole, M.P.
Eight Hon. J. W. Henley, M.P.
Lord John Eussell, M.P.
Eight Hon. W. E. Gladstone, M.P., Chan,
cellor of the E.xchequer.
Right Hon. Sir George Grey, M.P., Secretary
of State.
Eight Hon. Sir Charles Wood, Bt., M.P.,
Secretary of State for India.
Eight Hon. Sir George Cornwall Lewis, Bt.
M.P,, Secretary of State for War.
I
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592
593
594
595
596
597
598
599
600
601
602
603
604
605
606
607
GALLERY No. 7.
301
JOHN PHILLIP, H.A.— continued.
Aqua Fresca IF. D. Holt, Esq.
Asking a Blessing William T alter saU, Esq.
La Bomba, or the Wine Drinkers R. Brocklehanlc, Esq.
The Early Career of Murillo J. M. Keiller, Esq.
“ He was reduced to earn his weekly bread by painting coarse and
hasty pictures for the Feria (weekly fair), held in a broad street branch-
ing from the northern end of the Old Alameda, and in front of the old
church of All Saints’, remarkable for its picturesque semi-Moorish belfry.
This venerable market presents every Thursday an aspect which has
changed but little since the days of Murillo. Fruit, vegetables, and
coarse pottery, old clothes, old iron, still cover the ground or load the
stalls as they did two centuries ago, when the unknown youth stood
among gipsie.s, muleteers, and mendicant friars, selling for a few reals
those productions of his early pencil for which royal collectors are now
ready to contend .” — Vide Stirling's “ Annals of Spanish Painters.”
Gathering the Offerings Colonel Hargreaves
The Water Drinkers Walter Dunlop), Esq.
La Gloria : a Spanish Wake John Pender, Esq.
0, Nannie ! Wilt Thou Gang wi’ Me ^ B. Ar milage, Esq. {Sorrel Bank)
Grace IN THE Highlands G. C. Dewhurst, Esq.
T. BARKER (Bath)
Gipsy Encampment J. Ryecroft, Esq.
RICHARD DADD
The Water Carriers George W. Agnew, Esq.
HENRY BRIGHT
Glynn Ceiriog, Wales — Sunset Edward Schunck, Esq., F.R.S.
E. W. COOKE, R.A
Wreck on the Goodwin Sands //. Dewhurst, Esq.
SAM BOUGH. R.S.A.
Moorland, near Carlisle Joseph Broome, Esq.
JOHN PHILLIP, R.A.
A Scotch Christening John Pender, Esq.
E. M. WARD, R.A.
Grinling Gibbons’s First Introduction to Court... Pender, Esq.
“ ] st March. —I caused Mr Gibbons to bring to Whitehall his excellent
piece of carving, where, being come, I advertised his Majesty. . . .
No sooner was he entered, and cast his eye on the work, but he was
astonished at the curiosity of it. . . . He commanded it should be
immediately earned to the queen’s side to show her. It was carried up
into her bed-chamber, where she was, and the king being called away,
left us with the queen, believing she would have bought it, it being a
crucifix ; but his Majesty was gone, a French peddling woman, one
Madame de Boord, who used to bring petticoats, fans, and baubles out of
France to the ladies, began to find fault with several things in the work,
which she understood no more than an ass or a monkey, so as in a kind
of indignation, I caused the person who brought it to carry it back to
the chamber, finding the queen so much governed by an ignorant French
woman, and this incomparable artist had his labour only for his pains.”
Evelyn's Dmry. i
GALLERY No. 7,
Mares and Foals
J, M. W. TURNER, R.A.
Proserpine, The Plains of Enna Edward Chapiimn^ Esq.
Thl Shore at Margate (Sun rising through vapour)
George Chajjman; Esq.
A Dream of Italy James Price^ Esq,
Rain, Steam, and Speed The National Gallery
The Approach to Venice Mrs. Moir
DAVID ROBERTS, R A.
A Chapel in the Cathedral of Dixmude, West Flanders
John Pender y Eaq.
614 Returning from the Ball, Venice
James Pricey Esq.
H. W. PICKERSGILL, R A
615 George Peabody, Esq. (The eminent American philanthropist)
II. Graves, Esq.
SIR MARTIN ARCHER SHEE, P.R.A.
616 HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN Royal Academy
P. WESTCOTT
Sir Elkanah Armitage (Mayor of Manchester 1846-7, and 1847-8;
High Sheriff of Lancashme 1866) E. Armitage, Esq.
C. BURTON BARBER
618 ' A Mute Appeal
Sir Richard Freake
I J. M. W. TURNER, R.A.
619 The Sol di Veneza (going to Sea) National Gallery
620 Going to the Ball, Venice James Price, Esq.
621 ’ Snowstorm (Steamboat off a Harbour Mouth making Signals)
National Gallery
622 I Wreckers, Coast of Northumberland (Steamboat assisting
Ship offshore) John Pender, Esq.
623 The Burial of Wilkie National Gallery
“ The midnight torch gleamed o’er the steamer’a side.
And Merit’s corse was yielded to the tide.”
Rosenau Gemge Holt, Esq.
!
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627
628
629
630
631
632
633
634
635
C. R. LESLIE, R.A.
Scene from Roderick Random William Afjneu\ Esq.
“ At length the important hour arrived, and the will wa.s produced in
the midst of the expectants, who formed a group whose looks and gestures
would have been very entertaining to an unconcerned spectator. Eut
the reader can scarce conceive the astonishment that appeared when an
attorney pronounced aloud the young squire sole heir of all his grand-
father’s estate, personal and real. My uncle, who had listened with
great attention, sucking the head of his cudgel all the while, accompanied
these words of the attorney with a stare and a ‘Whew’ that alarmed the
whole assembly. The eldest and pertest of my female competitors,
who had always been very officious about my grandfather’s person,
inquired with a faltering accent, and visage as yellow as an orange,
‘If there were no legacies,’ and was answered, ‘None at all!’ upon
which she fainted away. Tlie rest, whose expectations (perhaps) were
not so sanguine, supported their disappointment with more resolution,
though not wdthout giving evident marks of indignation and grief, at
least as genuine as that which appeared in them at the old gentleman’s
death. My conductor, after having kicked with his heel for some time
against the wainscot, began — ‘ So there is no legacy, friend. Ha !
Here’s an old succubus. But somebody’s soul howls for it, d n
me.’ ” — Chap. iv.
SIR EDWIN LANDSEER, R.A.
Odin (a celebrated blood-hound) Daniel TJmaites, Esq.
Lady Godiva’s Prayer H. W. Eaton., Esq., M.F.
“Leofric, Earl of Murcia, had imposed such heavy taxes on the
citizens of Coventry, that his lady, Godiva, moved by their entreaties,
so much importuned her lord to remit them, that he consented on
condition she would ride naked through the city at mid-day. This
condition ‘humanity ’ induced her to accept.”
The Sick Monkey Earl of Northbrook
Old Pensioners . — Colonel Hargreaves
On Trust (Portrait of H.R.H. Princess Mary
of Cambridge, at the age of six) ....H. W. Eaton, Esq.
Spearing the Otter Ang%is Holden, Esq.
An Event in the Forest John Fender, Esq.
Lady Emily Peel and her Favourite Dogs H. Graves, Esq.
Scene from Midsummer Night’s Dream (Titania and Bottom ]
Fairies attending, Peablossom, Cobweb, Mustardseed,
Moth, &c.) W. C. Quilter, Esq., M.F.
“If we shadows have offended,
Thmk but this (and all is mended)
That you have but slumbered here.
While these visions did appear;
And this weak and idle theme
No more yielding, but a dream.
Gentles, do not reprehend;
If you pardon we will mend.
And, as I am an honest Puck,
If we have unearned luck
Now to scape the serpent’s tongue.
We will make amends ere long.
Else the Puck a liar call.
So good night unto you all.
Give me your hand if we be friends.
And Robin shall restore amends.” — Epilogue.
304 GALLERY No. 7.
SIR EDWIN LANDSEER, 'R.K.-coniinucd.
Children of the Mist Jesse Haworth^ Esq.
An Incident in Deer-stalking George Holt^ Esq.
The Lost Sheep John Fender^ Esq.
Portrait of Mr. Van Amburgh (as he appeared with his
animals at the London Theatres). Painted for Field
Marshal the Duke of Wellington Duke of Wellington
Well-bred Sitters, who never say they’re bored Daniel Thwaites^ Esq.
Uncle Tom and his Wife for Sale J. C. Harter^ Esq.
WILLIAM BRADLEY
642 Charles Swain (Author and Poet) R. Leake^ Esq., M.F.
j C. A. DUVAL
643 John Kennedy, Esq., of x^rdwick Hall J. L. Kennedy, Esq.
JOHN LINNELL
j Rt. Hon. Francis J. Baring, M.P. (First Lord Northbrook;
Born 1793 ; Died 1866) Earl of Northbrook
CHARLES LANDSEER, R A.
The Merry Monks of Melrose G. R. Clayton, Esq.
SIR FRANCIS GRANT, P.RA.
Portrait of Himself Col. Grant
I
GALLERY No. 8
G. P. CHALMERS, R S A.
The End of the Harvest J. Forbes While^ Esq., LL.D.
SIR A. W. CALLCOTT, R.A.
The Tomb of Cicero, Mola di Gaeta Mrs. Dyson Perrins
Amalfi, South Italy David Ainsworth, Esq.
An English Landscape (Cattle by Landseer) David Jardlne, Esq.
HENRY DAWSON
The Vale of the Lune Daniel Tliwaites, Esq.
E. W. COOKE, R.A.
The Church at Venice (called Santa Maria della Salute)
0. F. H. Bolckow, Esq.
F. LEE-BRIDELL
Lake Como E. R. Platt, Esq.
W. COLLINS. R A
Mendicants at the Gate of a Franciscan Monastery. . . George Holt, Esq.
RICHARD DADD
Midsummer Night’s Dream Thomas Ashton, Esq.
GEORGE MASON, AR.A.
A Pastoral Symphony Lord Wantage
Unwilling Playmates Godfrey Wedgwood, Esq.
The Gander WiUiam Coltart, Esq.
The Harvest Moon A. Henderson, Esq.
Evening Humphrey Roberts, Esq,
Near Matlock : Eventime Duke of Westminster
Young Anglers William Agnew, Esq.
Wind on the Wold Sir F. Leighton, Bart.
JOHN LINNELL
A Coming Storm
Humphrey Roberts, Esq,
Lytham Sandhills
Airs. Thomas Agnew
H. O’NEIL, AR.A.
JAMES HOLLAND
Venice
Mrs. Dyson Perrin.
T. WEBSTER. R A.
Summer John Knowles , Esq.
Spring ‘ F. W. GraJton^ Esq.
The Dame’8 School Ear! of Northbrook
“In every village marked with little sjiire,
Embowered with trees, and hardly known to fame,
There dwells in lowly shed and mean attire,
A matron old, whom we schoolmistress name.” — Sheyistone.
P. F. POOLE, RA.
The Escape of Glaucus and Ione, with the Blind Girl
Nydia, from Bom PEI I Wi/Nayn Wa
WILLIAM ETTY, R A.
Portrait of Himself
City of Manchester
JOHN LINNELL
Landscape
II. Crabtree, Esq
W. PARTRIDGE, AR-A.
Viscount Melbourne (Prime Minister)
D. MACLTSE. R.A.
Edward Lytton Bulwer (First Earl of Lyttoii)..
Lord Mount Temple
Danish Craft on the Elbe
Mrs. Thomas Agmw
CECIL LAWSON
Cynl Flower, Esq., M.P.
Strayed
HENRY DAWSON
The Pool Below London Bridge
ATew on the Thames, Looking Towards St. ILaul’s
James Orrock, Esq.
ri. T. Ilollingsworth, Esq.
James Orrock, Esq.
1'iiE Wayfarers
The Plough
The Harbour of Refuge
The Old Gate
The Peaceful Thames ..
The Lost Path
William Agnew, Esq.
The Count de Bayona
William Agnew, Esq.
A. E. Street, Esq.
W?- Charles Tennant, Bart.
If. F. Makins, Esty
Dutch Boats, Storm coming on
A^enice
. .. N. Eckei'sley, Esq.
C. C. Dewhurst, Esq.
GALLERY No. 8.
307
ROBERT TONGE
689 The Shore at Hovlake W. Coltart^ En((.
F. LEE-BRIDELL
690 Returning FROM THE AVeddixg, Upper Austria E. Naylor^ E^<i.
W. ETTY, R A.
691 The Dance Elr Charles Ttnnaiit^ Bart.
“ A figured dance succeeds : a comely band
Of youths and maidens bounding hand-in-hand.
The maids in soft simars of linen drest,
The youths all graceful in the glossy vest :
Of these the locks with flow’ry wreaths unrolled ;
Of those the side adorn’d with swords of gold ;
I * * X-
] Tliat glittering gay from silver belts depend.
I The gazing multitudes admire around
Two active tumblers in the centre bound ;
Now high, now low, their ])liant limbs they bend,
And geu’ral songs t!ie spiightly revel end.”
i
Hama's Dlsviii tion of Achilles' Shield. ( Papes tvanslatian.)
692 '
FumvERS
w. RATHJFNS
. Samuel Barlow,
693
F. R. LEE, R A.
The Beech Avenue
Esq.
JAMES HOLLAND
694
The Golleone
Mo.nument, Venice
.. S. a. Ual'anel,
E.i.
695
Landing Fish
E. DUNCAN
at 'Whitby
.. G. R. Cl ay tern, Esq.
J. A. HOUSTON, R.S.A.
696
Newton Investigating Light
Esq.
697
Venice
JAMES HOLLAND
Esq.
DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI
698
: The Blessed Damozel
. . ^^rs. Dyson Perrins
699
Proserpina ...
... Mrs. W. J. Turner
700
The Beloved
Esq,
701
Sibylla Palmifeba
Esq.
702
Dante’s Dream on the Day of the Death of Beatrice
Joseph Rust on, Es(p
“Then T.ove said, ‘ Now shall all things be made clear :
Come and behold our lady where she lies.’
These ’wildering phantasies.
They carried me to see my lady dead,
Even as I there was 1 d.
Her ladies with a veil were coveiiug her,
And with her was such very humbleness.
That she appeared to say, I am at peace .,’ — Dante (‘ Vita Nuov .”)
■ ■ P?;
308
GALLERY No. 8.
DANTE GABRIEL ROSSETTI— co««inu€d.
703 A Vision of Fiammetta Mrs. W. A. Turner
The Water Willow Mrs. W. A. Turner
"05 I Le Joli Cceur Mrs. IF. A. Turner
"06 Beata Beatrix Fredrick Craven, Esq.
707 The Blue Bower Mrs. Dyson Perrins
G. P. CHALMERS, R S A.
708 ; ()r,D Letters Albert Instil ate, Dimdee
709
710
711
712
M. D. MUTRIE
Camellias
Mrs. Case
SIR DAVID WILKIE, RA.
The Letter Writer James Price, Esq
WILLIAM COLLINS. R A.
Early Morning, Sussex Coast John Pender, Esq
F. W. HULME
Early Spring — Crossing the Stream Mrs. Dewhurst
A L. EGG, R A.
Vl3 Scene from “Taming of the Shrew” (Katheriue and
Petruchio) Mrs. Thomas Agnew
Pet. What is this ? Mutton !
Sent, Ay.
Pet. Who brought it ?
Servt. I.
Pet. ’Tis burnt ; and so is all the meat.
What dogs are these ? Where is the rascal cook ?
How durst you, villains, bring it from the dresser,
, And serve it thus to one that loves it not ?
There, take it to you, trenchers, cup, and all.
( Throios the meat, cCr., about the Stage.)
WILLIAM COLLINS. R A.
714 ! Cromer Sands //. TP. Eaton, E<q., M . P .
\ SIR DAVID WILKIE, R A.
715 Turkish Coffee House James Price, Esq.
E. W. COOKE. R A.
710 On the Scheldt C. F. H. Bolckow, Esq.
RANDOLPH CALDECOTT
717 The Three Jolly Huntsmen ...The Right lion. A. J. Mundella, M.P.
i _ W. MULLER
718 ' Near Gillingham Frederick Nettle fold, Esq.
i
GALLERY No. 8.
309
719
720
21
722
723
724
725
726
727
728
729
730
731
732
733
734
SIR R COLLIER
The Stelvio Pass W. Jlinmers, £sq.
W. MULLER
Ancient Tombs and Dwellings in Lycia, Asia Minor
C. F. IL Bolckovj^ Esq.
F. R. LEE. R.A., and T. S. COOPER, RA.
Summer Breezes Colonel Hargreaves
W. MULLER
Eel Bucks at Goring Wllliani Agneu\ Es(^.
Athens
WILLIAM LINTON
Mrs Fearenside
W. MULLER
The Baggage Waggon - Thomas Ashton, Esq.
B. J. NIEMANN
The Wooden Walls of Oi.d England M. Hobson, Esq.
Avenue at Althorp
Gillingham
A River Scene
P. R. LEE, RA.
W. MULLER
. W. J. Carver, Esq.
. . W. Tatter sail, Esq.
G. C. Bewhurst, Esq.
RANDOLPH CALDECOTT
The Girl I Left Behind Me City Manchester
\ W. MULLER
The Slave Market, Cairo JV. Kenyon, Esq.
View op Lancaster
WILLIAM LINTON
Miss Estrigye
Scene on THE Nile...
i Low Life — Welsh Interior
W. MUGLER
The Slave Market
James Kenyon, Esq.
James Worthington, Esq.
T. E. Taylor, Esq,
GALLERY NO. 9
A Bacchante
L. W. REYNOLDS
Moth KK AND Child William A(j)ien\ Esq.
E. M. WARD, R.A.
The Night of Kizzio’s Murder John Pender., Esq.
“ The Queen was .fitting on the sofa, Kizzio in a chair opposite to
her, and Murray’s loose sister, the Countess of Aigyle, on one side.
Arthur Erskine, the equerry, Lord Robert Stuart, and the Queen’s
French phy.sician were in attendance standing. Darnley placed him-
self on the sofa at his wife’s side. She asked him if he had supped. He
muttered something, threwTis arm round her waist and kissed her. As she
shrank from him, half surprised, the curtain was again lifted, and again.st
the dark background, his corslet glimmering through the folds of a
crimson sash, a steel cap on his head, and his face pale, as if he had
risen from the grave, stood the figure of Ruthven. Glaring for a
mtiment on Darnley, and answering his kiss with the one word
‘ Judas,’ Mary Stuart confronted the awful apparition, and demanded
the meaning of the intrusion. Pointing to Rizzio, and with a voice a.s
sepulchral as his features, Ruthven answered, ‘ Let your man come
forth, he has been here overlong.’ ‘What has he done?’ the Queen
answered, ‘he is here by my will .’” — Vide Fronde's History of
England,
RANDOLPH CALDECOTT
]\1ay Day City of Manchester
Meeting of Shareholders — Declaration of Dividend
J. Edward MeisSy Esq.
SIR A. W. CALLCOTT, R A,
Italian Seaport
River Scene
Trent
.J. Brunei, EEq.
,.J Brunei, Esq.
J. Brunei, Esq.
P. WESTCOTT
Sir R. Rawlinson, C.B
T. WEBSTER, R.A,
Practising for a Village Concert
Sunday Morning
Playing Chess
Sir B. Rawlinson, C.P>.
JOHN LINNELL
Hillside Farm
Daniel Thwaitei
A. JOHNSTON
Family Prayer
adauj
740
:>')
'.ji
/ -rl
I DO
77(3
64
GALLKliY No. 9. 311
E. Vv7. COOKE, R.A.
ScHEVEXiNGEN Beacii ,...A. Atkiiison, Enq,
C. STANFIELD, R.A.
Capture of Smuggled Goods Adam DiKjdale, E.<q.
SIR J. WATSON GORDON, R.S.A.
James Houldsm^ortii (off Coltxess) James Ilouldsivorth, Esq.
I T. CRESWIOK, R.A.
UxDER THE Beech Trees Excrs. of Henry Wilson, Esq.
E. V/. COOKE, R.A.
Goodmmx Saxds Lord Brassey
H. O’NEIL, A.R.A.
IjAXDixg of H.R.H. the IThxcess Alexaxdra at Gravesexd,
March 7th, 1863. (The centre group consists of the
Koval Family of Denmark) Richard Peacock, Esq., M.P.
SIR J. WATSON GORDON, R.S.A.
Sir AV. Fairbairx (President of the British Association at
tlie Manchester meeting held in Se[4ember, 1861)
W. A. Fairhairn , Esq.
T. CRESWICK, R.A., and W. P. FRITH, R.A.
Haddox Hall .• G. C. Deivhnrst, Esq.
J. F. HERRING, Sen.
The Barox’s Charger II. C. Renshaw, Esq.
DAVID ROBERTS, R.A.
PcESTUM N. Eckersley, Esq.
' C. STANFIELD, R.A.
Tilbury Fort II^. TatUrsall, Esq.
W. DYCE, R.A.
(Jethsemaxe George Holt, Esq.
C. BAXTER
The Duchess J. Marshall Brooks, Esq.
JOHN LINNELL
J. M. AV. Turxer, K.A Sir Charles Tennant, Bart.
R. GARRICK
Axxiety Jesse Haivorth, Esq.
R. ANSDELL, R.A.
Poor Mailie R. M. ILiowles, Esq.
“Now lionest Hugboe, diuna fail
To tell my master a’ my tale,
Aud bid him burn this curs’d tether.
This said, })oor Mailie turn’d her head
Aud clos’d her e’en amang the dead.”
, Bu4'nss poem of ^J^oor Mailie,"
&
GALLERY No. 9.
R. ANDSELL, R.A. — continued.
The Pet of the Bothie Richard Peacock^ M.P.
C. BAXTER
The Countess J. Marshall Bvooh^ Es<j.
J. LINNELL
The Right Hon. Sir Robert Peel //. C. Renshaw^ Esq.
R. GARRICK
Joys Jesse Haworth, Esq.
W. E. J. DIGHTON
Haymaking, Sonning-on-Thames E. Atkmson, Esq.
A. L. EGG, R.A.
Henrietta Maria in Distress, Relieved by Cardinal de Retz
Thomas Ashton, Esq.
“ Cardinal de Retz, the principal leader of the Fronde, paid a visit
of enquiry on the 6th of January to learn what had become of the
desolate Queen of England, after a series of furious skirmishes and
slaughters which had convulsed Paris during the days immediately pre-
ceding the 6th of January. It was well he had not forgotten her, for
her last loaf was eaten, her last faggot had been consumed, and she was
destitute of the means of purchasing more.” — Strickland's Queens.
The Night Before Naseby Abraham Haworth, Esq.
JOHN LINNELL
Watering Place
G. C. Dewhiirst, Esq.
J. T. LINNELL
Cherry Blossoms
SIR C. EASTLAKE, P.R.A.
Gaston de Foix taking Leave of his Mistress on the
Eve of the Battle of Ravenna Mrs. 11. Bolckow
C. F. II. Bolckow,
A Highland Lot for Sale
C. F. II. Bolckow
Old England
JAMES HOLLAND
Grand Hotel, Venice — Sunset
S. G. Holland,
A ELMORE, R.A.
Louis XIII. and Louis Quatorze W. Waring,
“ When the little prince was brought to the King, after his
christening, the latter asked the child what was his name ? ‘ Louis
Quatorze,’ was the precocious reply. ‘ Not yet, my boy,’ observe<l his
parent.” — O)' 02 ce’s History of France.
GALLERY No. 9.
313
779
A. ELMORE, R.A. — conUnued.
The Origin of the Combing Machine Isaac Hold<’n, Esq.^ M.l\
This ingenious machine, now in general use in every silk, cotton,
and woollen manufactory in Europe, which, to quote the words of Mr.
Hawkshaw, President of the Institution of Civil Engineers, “ acts with
almost the delicacy of touch of the human fingers,” cost its inventor,
Joshua Heilman, of Alsace, a considerable fortune in fruitless etiurts to
bring it to perfection. Disheartened and nearly destitute, he returned
to his native place to revisit his family, and whilst sitting by the tire,
happening to turn round, perceived one of his daughters combing her
hair, when an idea struck him. He had found that which was wanting,
and to this simple incident was indebted for the perfecting of his
invention.
JOHN LINNELL
Rest N. Buckley^ Es<i.
J. B. PYNE
Windermere Wateriiead Edward Chaj)man^ Es'j.
D. MACLISE, R.A.
A Winter’s Tale John Rylands^ Esq.
“In Winter’s tedious idghts sit by the fire with good old folks and
let them tell the tales .” — Richard II., Act 5, Scene 1.
SIR FRANCIS GRANT, P.R.A.
7^3 ^Irs. Markham Col. F. Grant
V84
P. R. PICKERSGILL, R.A.
General Sir Charles Napier Henry Graves., Esq.
SIR FRANCIS GRANT
7 g 5 , The Melton Hunt The Duke of Wellington.
Lord Gardner.
liOrd Suffield.
Earl of Darlington.
Lord Macdonald.
Hon. Mrs. Villiers.
Countess of Wilton.
Lord Grey de Wilton.
Walter Little Gilmour, Esq.
The Earl of Wilton.
Hon. Augustus Villiers.
John White, Esq.
Sir F. Johnstone, Bart.
Prince Leichtenstein.
Sir David Baird, Bart.
Earl of Rosslyn,
Count Bathyany.
T. Haycock, Esq.
William Coke, Esq.
Prince Trutmansdorf.
John Moore, Esq.
Lord Archibauld St. Maur.
Sir James Musgrove, Bart.
Henry Greene, Esq.
Lord Cranstoun.
25 Mr. Chapman.
26 Mr. Godwin.
27 James Fairlie, Esq.
28 Marquis of Waterford.
29 Earl of Howth.
30 Captain Percy Williams.
31 Earl of Desart.
32 Mr. Slarriott,
33 Mr. King.
34, 35 First and Second Whips.
36 Mr. Treadwell, Huntsman.
37 Master Robert Baird.
'A. ELMORE, R.A.
Katuerine and Petrucuio (“ Taming of the Shrew ”)
JIrs. Thomas A<j)ini
GEORGE PATTEN, A.R.A.
Sir Tuomas Bazley, Bart (M.P. for tlie City of Man-
chester, 1857 — 1880) :sir T. S. Bazlei/y Bart.
E. M. WARD, R.A.
Macaulay at tue Albany Richard Hurst, Esq
T. WEBSTER, R.A.
Tue Frown Daniel Thivaites, Esq.
H. DAWSON
Lincoln Cathedral R. L. Chance, Esq.
A. ELMORE, R.A,
HoTsruR AND THE P'oP *. ...Thomas Ashton, Esq.
“ 1 remember, wlieu the fight was clone,
When I was dry with rage and extreme toil,
Breathless faint, leaning upon my sword.
Came there a certain lord, neat, trimly dressed,
Fresh as a bridegroom ; and his chin, new reap’d,
Showed like a stubble land at harvest home ;
He was perfumed like a milliner ;
And twixt his finger and his thumb he held
A pouncet-box, which, ever and anon.
He gave his nose, and took’t away again ;
\\dio, therewith angry, when it next came there.
Took it in snuff — and still he smil’d and talk’d ;
And as the soldiers bore dead bodies by,
He called them untaught knaves, unmannerly.
To bring a slovenly, unhandsome corse.
Betwixt the wind mid bis nobility.”
Henry IV. ( Part 1 ), Act 1, Scene J.
W. E. FROST, R.A.
j. L. Xeivall, Exq.
Haste thee, nymph, and bring with thee
Jest and youthful jollity ;
equips and cranks and wanton wiles.
Nods and becks, and wreathed smiles.
Such as hang on Hebe’s cheek.
And love to live in dimple sleek ;
Sport, that wrinkled Care derides.
And Laughter, holding both his sides :
Come and trip it, as you go.
On the light fantastic toe.” — R Allegro .
T. CRESWICK, R.A.
Henry Uewhurst, Esq.
David Ainsivurth, Esq.
792 Fuphru.syne
On the Tees
The Force ...
GALLEIIY No. 9,
A, ELMORE, R.A.
Religious Controversy in the Time of Louis XIV. Charles Warin(j^ Eaq.
‘•'The King had declared his intention ‘to eniploy only good Chris-
tians in public situations,’ meaning Roman Catliolics, and the most
tempting encoin’agement was held out to such as should set a public
example by abjuring their Protestant tenets. Accordingl}’ it was not
uncommon for an intending convert of rank to invite some leading
Protestant clergyman to meet some leading Catholic in his house, there
to debate respecting their differences, to satisfy the mind of their host
which rel'gion was ])referable.” — Lovi^ 'XIV. et son Sicrie.
R, B, FAULKNER ' '
Mr. Isaao Crewdson (a distinguished Citizen of Manchester, d. 1813).
Crewdson Waterhouse^ Esi[.
E, M. WARD, R.A.
Thackeray in his Study, 1844 Richard Ihirst, Es>i.
The Smile
JJaniel Thivaites^ Esq.
Beaming Eyes
JAMES HOLLAND
The Barbarigu Bajace
S. a. Holland^ Es<i.
Venice
MARK ANTHONY
The Deserted Church
T. Horne., Esq.
D. MACLISE, R.A,
P. F. POOLE, R.A.
Queen of the Harvest
JAMES HOLLAND
Piazza di San Giovanni a Paolo, Venice...
Mrs. Forshaw
COPLEY FIELDING
Vessels in a Breeze, off Bridlington Pier...J. Edward Reiss, Esq.
W. BRADLEY
John Brooks, Esq. (a Citizen of Manchester, and a prominent
Member of the Anti-Corn Law League)
J. Marshall JJ rooks, Es(i.
m
316
GALLERY No. 9.
' E. M. WARD, R.A.
808 Eve of St. Bartholomew. Visit of Charles IX., Catherine
de Medicis, and the Due d’ Anjou to Admiral Coligny,
after his attempted assassination on the point of tlic
massacre Holbrook Gaskell, Esq.
Charles IX., accompauied by his mother and brother, visited the
suffering Coligny. During the visit, the sombre and menacing attitude
of some, the whisperings, the goings and comings, the .signs of want of
respect in persons near the ajiartment, and the murmured convei'sation
of the King with Coligny, excited the anger of Catherine and her son.
. . , On his arrival, the King first ordered the admiral’s ])eoi)le to
leave the room, except Teligny and his wife (the son-in-law and daughter
of Coligny).” — History of the Unices of Guise, by Rene de Bouille,
DAVID ROBERTS, R.A.
New Palace of WESTMiNSTf:!! (from the River Thames) Chas Lucas, Esq.
Ruins of B a alb eg R. Brocklehank, Esq.
R. ANSDELL, R.A.
Treading Out the Corn in Andalusia E. Naylor, Esq.
DANIEL MACLISB, R.A.
(Born at Cork, 1811 ; d. 1871.)
812 Merry Christmas in the BarOxn’s Hall National Gallery of Ireland
Descending the staircase, towards the centre of the picture, the cere-
mony of bringing in the boar’s head is represented. A fair and large
boar’s head was served in upon a silver platter with minstrelsye, crowned
with bays and sweet rosemary, borne by a serving man wdth green scarf,
chosen for his “ height and lustiness,” preceded by the master of the
I revels, or Lord of Misrule, chaunting a carol in its prai.se.
Caput apri defero
Kedens laudes Domino.
The boar’s head in hand bring I,
With garlands gay and rosemary ;
I pray you all sing merrily —
Qui estis in convivio.
The group on the right in front is chiefly composed of the
Christmas mummers and masquers regaling. One of the principal is
Father Christmas, with his false Ijeard, dressed in fur and crowned
with holly. He is mingling the wassail in the bowl “ garnished with
ribbons.” St. Distaff attends him wdth the roasted pippins, peculiar
' to this beverage.
DAVID ROBERTS, R.A.
813 The Thames
814 Interior of t
815 Mrs. Brooks.
Greenwich Charles Lucas, Lsq.
Duomo at Milan Daniel Thwaites, Esq^
W. BRADLEY
J. Marshall Brooks, Esq.
P. P. POOLE, R.A.
816 j The Song of the Troubadours C. F. II. Bolckow, Esq.
GALLERY No. 10,
GALLERY NO. 10
J. W. WATERHOUSE, A.R.A,
The Magic Circle ... Purchased by the President and Council of the
Royal Academy^ under the terms of the Chrmfrey Bef/nest^
and lent by them.
SIR A. W. CALLCOTT, R.A.
View of Ghent James Worthinyton., Kay.
C. E. PERUGINI
Girl Reading Pir William Eden, Bart
J. CHARLTON
Fortune’s Favourites William Barlow, Esq.
A. ELMORE, R.A
Life in Algiers David Jardine, Esq.
The Story of Griselde J. L. Kennedy, Esq.
“ And as she wold over the threswold gon,
The Markis came and gan hire far to call
And she set down hire w’ater pot — anon
Besides the threswold gin an oxe’s stall.”
— Chaucer's Cleric s Tale.
ROBERT TONGE
Peep into Shropshire W. Coltart, Esq.
J. MORGAN
The Quadrille R. II. Bolton, Esq.
DAVID COX
Driving Home the Flock C. F. II. Bolckow, Esq.
Rook Shooting James Price
Return from Labour James Houldsivorth, Esq.
River Scene Peter Ellen, Esq.
Bettws Churchyard J. Gillott, Esq.
Going to the Hayfield F. Nettlefold, Esq.
The Skylark F. Nettlefold, Esq.
Rhyl Sands Corporation of Birmingham
Church at Bettws- y-Coed Daniel Thwaites, Esq.
Counting the Flock C. F. II. Bolckow, Esq.
Peace and War J. Cann, Jun., Esq.
Going to Market J. Gillott, Esq.
Boys Fishing Jesse Haworth, Esq
Stepping Stones on the Conway T. Q. Harter, Esq
w. MULLER
839 Ox THE Lagunes, Venice J - TayIoi \ E ;< q .
SIR CHARLES EASTLAKE, P R A-
840 Italian Pilgrims raven , Anq .
HEYWOOD HARDY
841 Fighting Lions Jhchard Peacoclc , Anq ., M . I .
“ Fierce as conflicting fire the combat burns,
And now it rises, now it sinks by turns.”
— Iliad of Homer.
SIR J. WATSON-GORDON, RS A
842 David Cox Birmingham and Midland Institute
JOHN LINNELL . „ , ,
843 Rest Buckley , A . nq .
i H. LE JEUNE, AR.A.
844 At the Spring
J. MORGAN ^ ; r.
845 A Feather in Her Cap Josep^i Dugdale , Asq .
W. BRADLEY . . ,
846 Lancashire Witch W illiam Agnenv , Enq .
RANDOLPH CALDECOTT
847 Gardener’s Little Daughter Newton Broadhent , Anq .
I G. P. CHALMERS, R.S.A.
g^g ' \ixcHiE orhes - White , Asq ., AL . D .
! ROBERT GAVIN, R.S.A.
819 (’iiiLDREN IN THE Wood R. Brocklebank, Esq.
i A. SOLOMON
850 I Sour Grapes UarJmg,
■ G. E. HBRING
851 , Lago Ax,.
T. SIDNEY COOPER, R.A.
852 ^ Sheep
853 I cattle
I JAMES HOLLAND
854 j Sunset at Sea
1 WILLIAM DYCE, R.A.
855 I John Knox Administering the Sacrament
850 ' Soliloquy of Henry ^ I
857 Woman of Samaria
858 Beatrice
./. A’. Toylor, AV/.
. . John Pemlei', E 7 .
. . .lokn Pender, Enq.
W'i//ia.m Agned', Esq.
1
320
868
GALLERY No. 10.
J. P. LEWIS. R.A.
The Midday Meal
P. F. POOLE, R.A.
Mother and Child DeiohursU Esq.
A. ELMORE, R.A.
Mary Queen of Scots and Christopher Norton at Bolton
Castle
“ Another time Mary Stuart had something to say to Norton ; and
this scene— so distinct is the picture— may be told in his own words :
‘One day when the Queen of Scots, in winter (1568-9), had been
sitting at the window-side knitting of a work, and after the board
covered, she rose and went to the fireside, and, making haste to have the
work finished, would not lay it away, but worked at it the time she
was warming of herself. She looked for one of her servants, which,
indeed, were all gone to fetch up her meat, and, seeing none of her own
folk there, called me to hold her work, who was looking at my Lord
Scrope and Sir Francis Knollys playing of chess. I went, thinking I had
deserved no blame, and that it should not have become me to have
refused to do it, my Lady Scrope standing there, and many gentlemen
in the chamber.’ Two years later the poor youth was
under the knife of the executioner at Tyburn.” —Froude's History of
England.
T. CRBSWICK, R.A.
The West Still Glimmers with Departisg Day... George Holt, Esq.
MARK ANTHONY
Erith Chcrch W. II. Ilouldsworth, Esq., M.P.
J. F. LEWIS, R.A. r, j ■ p
Bazaar at Cairo
P. F. POOLE. R A.
Lighting the Beacon on the Coast of Cornwall, at the
Appearance of the Spanish Armada B. ArmitagCf Esq.
» For swift to east, and swift to west the ghastly war-flame spread,
High on St. Michael’s Mount it shone ; it shone on Beachy Head
Far on the deep the Spaniard saw, along each Southern shire,
Cape beyond cape, in endless range, those twinkling points of fire.
T. CRESWICK. R.A. ^ ^ „
Over the Saxds
P. F. POOLE, R.A.
Greek Courtship
M. J. LAWLESS nu , V
The Sick Call Coltart, Esq.
“ Is any man sick among you ? Let him bring in the priests of the
I Church, and let them pray over him, anointing him with oil in the
1 name of the Lord.” — St. James v. 74.
1
GALLERY No. 10.
321
CECIL LAWSON
878 The Pool Henry Mason ^ K^<i.
I JOHN LINNELL
879 ! Shepherds Under the Hawthorn Tree James Taylor^ E^q.
\ A. SOLOMON
880 I “Le Malade Imaginaire” R. P. Harding, Esq.
JAMES STARK
881 j Landscape in Norfolk J. E. Bolton, Esq.
\ P. F. POOLE, R.A.
882 At the Spring G. C. De vhnrst, Esq.
; E. RATHJENS.
883 i Christmas Roses Samuel Barloio, Esq.
\ W. MULLER
884 The Pyramids, from the Nile Mrs. Dyson Perrins
JAMES HOLLAND
885 I Venice Ahel Buddey, Esq.
E. J. GREGORY, A.R.A.
886 ; Grand Canal, Venice C. J. Galloway, Esq.
W. DAVIS
887 I Port Banatyne George Rae, Esq.
888
889
890
891
892
893
894
895
896
897
H. LE JEUNE, A.R.A.
The Artist’s Model J. IF. RadcUffe^ Esq.
W. DAVIS
Harrowing Albert Wood, Esq.
W. LINTON
View of Snotvdon Eli Sjyencer, Esq.
View cf Snowdon (companion) Eli Spencer, Esq.
WILLIAM LINNEL
Haying and Maying Mrs. A. Dewhurst
JAMES HOLLAND
The Rialto Airs. Dyson Peirins
E. A. WATERLOW
The Shepherd’s Return The Artist
S. E. WALLER
’Twixt Love and Duty John C. IJ-lder, Esq.
JOHN LINNELL
Cornfield Chades Chapman, Esq.
R. LEHMANN
Portrait of R. Browning The Artist
w
GALLERY No. 10.
I F. W. W. TOPHAM
898 ! The Winged Pensioners of Assisi J. C. Ilaslam, Esq.
C, R. LESLIE, R.A.
899 I Columbus AND THE Egg J. Broughton Dugdale^ Esq.
900 Death of Queen Catherine J. Broughton Dugdale, Esq.
W. F. YEAMES, R.A.
Amy Robsart Purchased by the President
and Council of the Royal Academy^ under the terms of
the Chantrey Bequest^ and lent by them.
“ Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester, being the great favourite of the
Queen, Elizabeth, it was thought she would have made him her
husband. To this end, to free himself of all obstacles, he had his wife,
Amy Robsart, conveyed to the solitary house of Cumnor Hall, in Berk-
shire, inhabited by Anthony Forster, his servant. This same Forster,
in compliance with what he well knew to be the Earl’s wishes, came,
with others, in the dead of night, to the lady's bedchamber, and stifled
her in bed, and flung her downstairs, thereby believing the world would
have thought it a mischance, and so blinded their villainy. The morning
after, with the purpose that others should know of her end, did Forster,
on pretence of carrying out some behest of the Countess, bring a servant
to the spot where the poor lady’s body lay at the foot of the stairs.” —
See Aubrey's History of Berkshire."
HENRY DAWSON
Greenwich W. S. Hobson^ Esq.
SIR J. WATSON GORDON
903 Portrait of David Cox Birmingham Midland Institute
* T. SIDNEY COOPER, R.A.
904 An English Farmstead Sir Humphrey de Trgford^ Bart.
W. MULREADY, R.A.
905 Integrity R. Brocklebank, Esq.
‘‘Train up a child in the way he should go, and when he is old
he w’ill not depart from it.” — Proverbs, chap. xxii. verse 6.
906 ^'he Whistonian Controversy ( “ Vicar of Wakefield,”
chap, ii.) Earl of Rorthbrook
907 Burchell and Sophia in the Hayfield Earl of Northbrook
i E. HARGITT
908 An Old English Home The Artist
W. H. B. DAVIS, R.A.
909 The Wanderers Edward Cross, Esq.
JOHN LINNELL
910 , Sunset Richard Hurst, Esq.
GALLERY No. 10.
323
ROSE MAGNUS
911 I Lamplight 'The Artist
I ARTHUR STOCKS
912 ‘ The Last Sacrament Mrs. Mark Firth
913 j Venice.
JAMES HOLLAND
F. Elkington^ Esq.
E. BLAIR LEIGHTON
9 1* j The Secret T. J. Hirst^ Esq.
W. S. BURTON
915 Cavalier and the Puritan Albert Wood^ Esq.
A. ELMORE, R.A.
916 ' Invention of the Stocking Loom Sir Thomas S. Bazley, Bart.
William Lee, of St. John’s College, Cambridge, was, about the
I year 1589, expelled from the Univei’sity for marrying contrary to the
I statutes. Having no fortune, the wife was obliged to contribute to
their joint support by knitting ; and Lee, watching the motion of her
I fingers, conceived the idea of imitating those movements by a machine.
O. E. JOHNSON
917 I The Horse Fair T. Richards, Esq.
I J. FARQUHARSON
918 I A Joyless Winter’s Day Purchased by the President
\ and Council of the Royal Academy, under the terms of
the Chanlrey Bequest, and lent by them.
I P. H. CALDERON, R.A.
Aphrodite Sir B. Samuelson, Bart., M.P.
C. BURTON BARBER
Coaxing is Better than Scratching J. C. Eno, Esq.
E. J. GREGORY, A.R.A.
i 921 Drawing-room Day in Piccadilly Humphrey Robert, Esq.
I I ERSKINB NICOL, A.R.A.
j 922 The Fly Fisher Richard Peacock, Esq., M.P.
W. WYLD
Rotterdam Eli Lees, Esq.
923
H. W. B. DAVIS, R.A.
924 Noon Charles Churchill, Esq.
W. BRADLEY
Rt. Hon. W. E. Gladstone, M.P Rt. Hon. W. E. Gladstone, M P.
PRANK DICKSEE, A.R.A.
A Love Story S. G. Holland, Esq.
“ In whispers, like the whispers of the leaves
That tremble round a nightingale.” — Tennyson.
J. C. HOOK. R.A.
927 Coal Schooner John Brinten., Esq., M.P
L™
i
I
f.
(iALLEllY No. 10.
i SIR F. LEIGHTON, BART., P.R.A.
928 PncEBE Joh7i Pender^ Esq.
J. C. HOOK, R.A.
929 Seashore J/rs. Thomas Agnew
L. ALMA TADEMA, R.A.
9C0 Dr. AVashington Epps T)r. Washington Epps.
VAL C. PRINSEP, A.R.A.
931 Sunset on the Lagunes, Venice Mrs. J. K. Cross.
PETER GRAHAM, R.A.
932 The Gently Heaving Tide Sir T. Fowell Jjiixto}i, Bart.
G. H. BOUGHTON, A.R A.
933 Marken J. II. Hutchinson, Esq.
VAL C. PRINSEP, A.R.A.
934 Early Summer Joseph J. Armitage, Esq.
\ SIR NOEL PATON, R S A.
935 ; OsKOLD and the Elle-maids (Spenser’s “ Fairie Queen ”)
■ P. Beimett, Esq.
T. SIDNEY COOPER, R.A.
936 Canterbury Meadows John Mark, Esq.
MARCUS STONE, R.A.
937 Rejected Andrew Knowles, Esq.
J. C HOOK, R.A.
9 :' 8 The Return of Torello Albert Wood, Esq.
HENRY WALLIS
Q 39 Elaine llollbrook Gaskell, Esq.
“ In her right hand the lily, in her left
The letter ; all her bright hair streaming down ;
And all the coverlet was cloth of gold,
I Drawn to her waist, and she herself in white.
All but her face : and that clear-featured face
Was lovely, for she did not seem as dead,
But fast aslee]), and lay as though she smiled.” — Tennyson.
w. P. FRITH, R.A.
940 Charles Dickens in his Study F. II . Cosens, Esq.
941
942
943
sculpture.
S. ONSLOW FORD
Henry Irving as Hamlet The Artist
T. STIRLING LEE
Dawn of Womanhood The Artist
H. CALDER MARSHALL, R.A.
Undine The Artist
• <
GALLERY No. 11
GALLERY No. 11
WATER COLOUR DRAWINGS. DRAWINGS
IN BLACK AND WHITE. ENGRAVINGS AND
ETCHINGS.
ENGRAVINGS.
C. G. LEWIS
Daniel in the Lion’s Den (after Riviere) II. G. Creus^^
T. L. ATKINSON
The Forester’s Family (after Landseer) John Benton^
JOHN BURNET
The Challenge (after Landseer) Charles S. Agneiv, Esq.
C. G. LEWIS
Hunters at Grass (after Landseer) John Benton., Esq,
R. B. PARKES
The New Whip (after Barton Barber) Vhili'p Kessler., Es<(.
B. P. GIBBON
Be it Ever so Humble, there is no Place like Ho>[e (after
Landseer) Charles S. Agnew., Esq.
C. G. LEWIS, 1847
The Otter Hunt (after Landseer) J. Fernyhough^ Esq.
Shoeing (after Landseer) T. Biddnlph, Esg.
J. R. JACKSON
Otter and Salmon (after Landseer) C. J. Waddell, Esq.
C. G. LEWIS
A Random Shot (after Landseer) Charles S. Agnew, Esq.
Sanctuary (after Landseer) Charles B. Agnew, Esq.
A Cover Hack (after Landseer) II. Galloway, E 7.
WATER-COLOUR DRAWINGS.
J. W. WHITTAKER
Capel Curig, Storm Coming on
SIR JOHN GILBERT, R.A
Scene from Don Quixote
GALLERY No- 11
Cornfield
J. A. Rail ton, Esq.
Return from the Ride
W. WYLD
Milan Cathedral
J. C. Harter, Esq.
SIR F. W. BURTON
The Squire
John Pender, Esq.
F. DILLON, R.I.
Island of Philoe from the North
The Artist.
W. COLLINGWOOD
The Corner Glacier
COPLEY FIELDING
Cader Idris
N. Eckersley, Esq.
C. EARLE, R.I.
Fountains in the Villa Borghese, Rome
Mrs. Tniminger
H. MOXON COOK
Snow-covered Heights of Arran
T. R. LAMONT
Glasgerion
E. LUNDGREN
In the Cloisters at Seville
WARD KEYS
The Artist
Bolton Abbey
DAVID COX
Abel Buckley, Esq.
Calais Pier
S. J. HODSON
Mrs. Williams
La Place, Abbeville
J. W. WHITTAKER
IN A Snowstorm
W. Barlow, Esq.
F. POWELL, R.W.S.
Loch Coruisk, Isle of Skye
Mrs. Corbett
A. C. GOW, A.R.A,
The Requisitionists,
IF Cutlibert Quilter, Esq., M.P
An Italian Girl
LOUIS HAGHE
Interior of Cathedral, Sienna
J. Macandrew, Esq.
§
£
979 ,
980 I
981 :
982
983
984
985 !
986 !
987 !
988
989 ,
I
990 '
I
991 i
I
992
993
994
995
996
997
998
999
1000
1001
1002
SUTTON PALMER
Willows : A Study near Arundel J. Macandrew^ Esq. :
VICAT COLE, R.A,
Harvest Scene John Lomax^ Esq. =
ENGRAVINGS AND ETCHINGS.
THOMAS LANDSEER, A.R.A.
Braemar (after Landseer) James Lowe^ Esq'
Morning (after Landseer) J. Fernyhough, Esq.
The Deer Pass (after Landseer) Emil Reiss^ Esq.
Monarch of the Glen (after Landseer) Emil Reiss^ Esq.
The Horse Fair (after Rosa Bonheiir) Mark Price^ Esq.
Laying Down the Law (after Landseer) F. II. Oldham., Esq.
Drive of Deer (after Landseer) Duncan Matheson, Esq.
A Deer Family (after Landseer) J. E. Buckley, Esq.
Night (after Landseer) J. Fernyhough, Esq.
Stag at Bay (after Landseer) E. Ilulton, Esq.
Dignity and Impudence (after Landseer) Harold Lee, Esq.
JOHN OUTRIM
Mountain Top (after Landseer) S. Baerlein, Esq.
H. HERKQMER, A.R.A.
“Caller Herrin” (after Millais) W. B. Harrison, Esq.
C. W. WASS
Waiting for the Countess (after Landseer) ... C. Norland Agnew, Esq.
CHARLES MOTTRAM
Uncle Tom and HIS Wife FOR Sale (after Landseer) G. F. Williams, Esq.
T. OLDHAM BARLOW, R.A.
La Gloria, a
The Bride of Lammermoor
Right Hon. W. E. Gladstone (after Millais) .
W. HENDERSON
Right Hon. Joseph Chamberlain (after Holl)
, The Artist
. I he Artist
, The Artist
s
, The Artist
The Artist
The Artist
u
The Artist I
The Artist
Iluish, Esq. 1
i
GALLERY No. 11
H. HERKOMER, A.R.A.
The Earl of Beaconsfield (after Millais) J. W. Jlaclure, Esq., M. /*.
THOMAS LANDSEER, A.R.A.
Doubtful Crumbs (after Landseer) S. Baerlein, Esq.
SAMUEL COUSINS, R.A.
“Saved” (after Landseer) ‘ II. G. Crews, Esq.
Marie Antoinette and Louis XVI. in the Prison of the
Temple (after E. M. Ward) II. G. Crews, Esq.
The Surprise (after DiibufFe) iJr. Lionel Roberts
The Strawberry Girl (after Reynolds) Dr. Lloyd Roberts
Samuel Cousins, Esq., R.A. (after Long) F. E. Power, Esq.
Lady Spencer and Child (after Reynolds) P. E. Power, Esq.
Connoisseurs (after Landseer) II. G. Crews, Esq.
X6 ! (after Millais) II. Ilesketh, Esq.
Her Majesty the Queen (after Dickenson) P. E. Power, Esq.
New-laid Eggs (after Millais) II. Ilesheth, Esq.
H.R.H. THE Prince of Wales as a Sailor Boy (after
Winterhalter) P. E. Power, Esq'
H.R.H. THE Princess of Wales P. E. Power, Esq.
Her Most Gracious Majesty Queen Victoria Receiving the
Sacrament at her Coronation (after C. R. Leslie)
Henry Graves, Esq.
Midsummer Night’s Dream (after Landseer) Mark Price, Esq.
Bolton Abbey in the Olden Time (after Landseer)... II. G. Crews, Esq.
Children of the Abercorn Family (after Landseer) P. E. Power, Esq.
Mrs. Braddyll (after Rejniolds) P. E. Power, Esq.
Yes or No % (after Millais) II. Ilesketh, Esq.
The Maid and the Magpie (after Landseer) John Benton, Esq.
Moretta, a Venetian Girl (after Leighton) James Lowe, Esq.
Miss Penelope Boothby, “The Mob Cap” (after Reynolds)
Thomas Frost, Esq.
Hon. Anne Bingham (after Reynolds) P. L. Power, Esq.
Simplicity (after Reynolds) P. E Power, Esq.
F. C. LEWIS
H.R.H. The Prince Consort (after Winterhalter)... Graves, Esq.
Her Majesty the Queen (after Winterhalter) Henry Graves, Esq.
GEORGE ZOBEL
liiTTLE SwANSDOWN (after Storey) S. Baerleln, Esq.
Sweet Margery (after Storey) S. Baerlein, Esq.
GALLERY No. 11.
329
1032
1033
1034
1035
1036
1037
1038
1039
1040
1041
1042
1043
1050
W. H. SIMMONS
The Sick Monkey (after Landseer) N. Baerlein^ Esq.
JAMES STEPHENSON
Ophelia (after Millais) Henry Graves^ Esq.
Taming the Shrew (after Landseer) Henry Graves^ Esq-
T. L. ATKINSON
Wellington Re-Visiting the Field of Waterloo (after Landseer)
Henry Graves, Esq.
Peace (after Landseer) II. G. Crews, Esq.
War (after Landseer) II. G. Crews, Esq.
F. STACPOOLE, A.R.A.
The Roll Call (after Miss E. Thompson) M. B. Huish, Es<[.
Circe and the Companions of Ulysses (after Riviere)
George W. Agneiv, Esq.
Sympathy (after Riviere) F. Ilepivorth, Esq.
School Revisited (after Leslie) George W. Agneiv, Esq.
Playfellows (after Riviere) Henry Deivhurst, Esq.
Persepolis, the Ancient Capital of Persia... George IF. Agnew, Esq.
“ They say the lion and the lizard keep
The halls where Jamshyd gloried and drank deep.”
A Pot-pourri : Rose Leaves and Lavender (after Leslie)
C. Morland Agnew, Esq.
Charity (after Riviere) 0. E. Heys, Esq.
T. L. ATKINSON
Let Sleeping Dogs Lie (after Riviere) T. Woodcocl', Esq.
W. H. SIMMONS
The Lion at Home (after Rosa Bonhenr) J. Fernyhougk, Esq.
J. B. PRATT
Puss IN Boots (after Paten) James Ashcroft, Esq.
CHARLES MOTTRAM
The Scapegoat (after Holman Hunt) W. II. Doeg, Esq.
G. T. DOO, R.A.
The Raising of Lazarus Henry Graves, Esq.
R. WALLIS
Approach to Venice (after Turner) W. Hinmers, Esq.
J. T. WILLMORE, A.RA.
Harvest in the Highlands (after Landseer) Joseph Diigdale, Esq.
n
71
GALLERY No. 11
ROBERT BRANDARD
Crossing the Brook (after Turner) Edwin Hilton^ Esq.
T. A. PRIOR
Zurich (after Turner) Henry Gravesy Esq.
J. T. WILLMORE, A.R.A.
Mercury and Argus (after Turner) F. J. Simpson, Esq.
JOHN PYE
Ehrenbreitstein (after Turner) Joseph Hugdale, Esq.
WILLIAM MILLER
The Grand Canal, Venice (after Turner) Joseph Dugdale, Esq.
ROBERT GRAVES. A.R.A.
La Vierge au Rosaire (after Murillo) H. G. Crews, Esq.
W. R. SMITH
Dido and J^Ineas on the Morning of the Chase (after Turner)
George W. Agneiv, Esq.
J. T. WILLMORE, A.R.A.
The Chief’s Return from Deer Stalking (after Landseer)
Joseph Dugdale, Esq.
DAVID LUCAS
The Cornfield (after Constable) Charles S. Agnew, Esq.
Salisbury Cathedral (after Constable) Charles S. Agnew, Esq.
The Lock (after Constable) Charles S. Agnew, Esq.
Dedham Vale (after Constable) Thomas Frost, Esq.
THOMAS LANDSEER, A.R.A.
Highland Nurses (after Landseer) John Lilly, Esq.
J. COUSEN
Mercury and Herse (after Turner) George W. Agnew, Esq
J. T. WILLMORE. A.R.A.
The Old Temeraire being Towed to her Last Berth (after
Turner) F. J. Simpson, Esq.
Oberwesel on the Rhine (after Turner) Edward Cross, Esq.
ROBERT WALLIS
Lake Nemi (after Turner) Edward Cross, Esq.
Lake Lucerne (after Turner) Henry Graves, Esq.
EDWARD GOODALL
Cologne (after Turner) Joseph, Dugdale Esq.
Caligula’s Bridge (after Turner) George W Agnew, Esq.
f
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I
1
I
GALLERY No. 11
G. HOLLIS
St. Mark’s Place, Venice (after Turnei) George W. Agnew^ Esg.
DAVID LUCAS
The Corsairs’ Island (after Harding) Thomas Frost, Esq.
W. H. SIMMONS
Rosalind and Celia (after Millais) Thomas Iline, Esq.
Towing the Victory into Gibraltar (after Stanfield)
.Joseph Dugdale, Esq.
J. T. WILLMORB, ARA.
Ancient Italy (after Turner) F. ,1. Simpson, J]sq.
W. MILLER
Modern Italy (after Turner) F. J. Simpson, Esq.
W. J. DAVEY
The Last Sleep of Argyle (after Ward) Thomas Aitken, Esq
THOMAS LANDSEER, A.R.A.
Chevy (after Landseer) S. Baerlein, Esq.
R. W. MACBETH, A.R.A.
The Harbour of Refuge (after Fred Walker)... Joseph Ormerod, Esq.
Bacchus and Ariadne (after Titian) The Artist.
The Harvest Moon (after Mason) John Lawson, Esq.
J. L. ATKINSON
Stella (after Millais) S. Titmas, Esq.
Vanessa (after Millais) S. Titmas, Esq.
BELLIN
David Cox (after Watson Gordon) Peter Allen, Esq.
G. H. EVERY
For the Squire (after Millais) J. J. Bolton, Esq.
A Little Duchess (after Millais) J. J. Bolton, Esq.
H. HERKOMER, A.R.A.
Grandfather’s Pet G. J. Waddell, Esq.
J. D. MILLER
A Milkmaid (after Mason) 0. E. Ileys, Esq.
R. W. MACBETH, A.R.A.
The Fishmonger’s Shop (after Fred. Walker) II. Massey, Esq.
LUMB STOCKS, R.A.
A Sister’s Kiss (after Leighton) Joseph Ormerod, Esq.
P. SEYMOUR HADEN.
Calais Pier (after Turner) The Artist
332
GALLEKY No. 11.
R. W. MACBETH. A.R.A.
1094: The Plough (after Fred. Walker) George W. Agn'v.\ Esq.
1095 Mushroom Gatherers (after Fred. Walker) ... George W. Agnew, Esq.
1096 Marlow Ferry (after Fred. Walker) IF. //. Doeg^ Esq.
1097 A Pastoral Symphony (after Mason) John Laivson, Esq
I W. J. DAVEY
1098 ; Execution of Montrose (after Ward) Thomas Aitken, Esq.
I THOMAS LANDSEER. A.R.A.
1099 Ptarmigan Hill (after Landseer) S Baerlein^ Esq.
I DAVID LAW
1100 ' The Windmill (after Linnell) J. J. Bolton, Esq.
I WILFRID BALL
1101 Stratford-on-Avon Church (Original Etching.) J. J. Bolton, Esq.
C. W. CAMPBELL
1102 G. F. Watts, Esq., R.A. (after Watts — Mezzotint) The Artist
JOSEPH KNIGHT
1103 Landscape — Cornfield (Mezzotint) The Artist
GERALD ROBINSON
1104 Le Chapeau Noir (after Reynolds) George IV. Agnew, Esq.
DAVID LAW
X105 Rydal Water (Original Etching) G. F. Williams, Esq.
L. J, STEELE
XiQg The Poacher (after Riviere) Walter Adams Esq.
DAVID LUCAS
1107 A Devonshire River (after Lee) Thomas Frost, Esq.
ROBERT GRAVES, A.R.A.
llQg Mrs. Graham (after Gainsborough) Thomas Frost, Esq.
THOMAS LANDSEER, A.R.A.
1109 Man Proposes, God Disposes (after Landseer) ... J. E. Buckley, Esq.
JOSEPH KNIGHT
1110 Mouth OF THE Conway (Original Mezzotint) The Artist
DAVID LAW
nil Rydal Mount (Original Etching) G. F. Williams, Esq.
JOSEPH KNIGHT
1112 Ci/)UDED Heaven (Original Mezzotint) The Artist
DAVID LAW
1113 Windsor Castle (Original Etching) henry Thornber, Esq.
GALLERY No. 11
F. SLOCOMBE
Stoke Pogis Church (Original Etching) G. H. Esq.
DAVID LAW.
Tintern Abbey (Original Etching) Walter Frost, Esq.
F. SLOCOMBE
Little Stanmore Church (Original Etching) ... R. Montgomery, Esq.
CHARLES TURNER
Age of Innocence (after Reynolds) Thos. Frost, E^q.
W. FINDEN
The Naughty Boy (after Landseer) James Ashcroft, Esq.
J. H. ROBINSON
Red Riding Hood (after Landseer) James Ashcroft, Esq.
L. J. STEELE
His Only Friend (after Riviere) George W. Agnew, Esq.
J. J. CHANT.
Remnant of an Army (after E. Butler) J/. B. Huish, Esq.
G. H. EVERY
Viola (after Leighton) H. G. Creivs, Esq.
DAVID LAW
Hereford (Original Etching) Walter Frost, Esq.
SAMUEL COUSINS, R.A.
The Dauphin (after Greuze) II. Thornher, Esq.
WILLIAM HOLL
Merrymaking in the Olden Time (after Frith) Joseph Dugdale, Esq.
G. T. DOO, R.A.
Mercy Interceding for the Vanquished (after Etty)... Mrs. Agneiv
F. SLOCOMBE
Farm in the New Forest (Original Etching)... James Ashcroft, Esq.
DAVID LAW
Windermere (Original Etching) G. F. Williams, Esq.
Grasmere (Original Etching) G. F. Williams, Esq.
F. STACPOOLE, A.R.A.
Envy, Hatred, and Malice (after Riviere) Henry Kershaw, Esq.
FRANCIS HOLL
Coming of Age in the Olden Time (after Frith) Joseph Dugdale, Esq.
GALLERY No. 11,
A. H. HAIG
[Original Etchings.]
Mont St. Michel, Normandy
Cathedral of St. George, Limburg on the Laiin
The Vesper Bell
A Quiet Hour
Chartres Cathedral, North Porch
Morning of the Festival
Chartres Cathedral
II . G. Crews^ Esq.
R. Dunthorney Esq.
II. G. Crews., Esq.
II. G. Crews, Esq.
II. G. Crews, Esq.
II. G. Crews, Esq.
II. G. Crews, Esq.
WATER-COLOUR DRAWINGS,
C. DAVIDSON
The First Shower of the Season The Artist
COPLEY FIELDING
Bridlington Pier W. II. Houldsworth, Esq., M.P.
J. S. COTMAN
Entrance to the Tagus Peter Allen, Esq.
W. W. DEANE
Riva DEI ScHiAVONi, VENICE Mrs. Dearie.
S. PROUT
Church of St. Pierre, Caen John Platt, Esq.
P. F. POOLE, R.A.
Maternal Embrace Abraham Haworth, Esq.
G. SHEFFIELD
Near Douglas, Isle of Man The Artist
J. D. HARDING
Near the Lake of Thun David Jardine, Esq.
COPLEY FIELDING
Glen Falloch, Argyleshire Peter Allen, Esq.
W. NESFIELD
The Giant’s Causeway Henry Pritt, Esq.
JAMES HOLLAND
Venice Rev. C. J. Sale
F. W TOPHAM.
Homewards F. Craven, Esq.
F. TAYLER, R.W.S.
Highland Drovers J. Broughton Dugdale, Esq.
DAVID COX.
The Portrait Gallery, Hardwicke Hall Duke of Devonshire
1153 !
i
1154 j
I
1155 I
1156
1157
1158
1159 I
1160 !
!
1161 ^
1162
1163
1164
1165
GALLERY No. 11. 335
A. E. CHALON, R.A.
Her Majesty’s First Drawing Room F. Bradley, Es^i.
DAVID COX.
Taking the Left Road Peter Allen, Esq.
S. PROUT
Beauvais Cathedral G. F. H. Bolckow, Esq.
COPLEY FIELDING
Fairlight Downs, Looking towards Dungeness ... Peter Allen, Esq.
D. G. ROSSETTI
Ricordati di me Thos. War die, Esq.
P. W. TOPHAM
The Letter Writer P. M. Knowles, Esq.
G. CATTERMOLE
Service in the Baron’s Chapel J. Orrock, Esq.
F. TAYLER, R.W.S.
The Ferry W. Gilbey, Esq.
S. PROUT
Hotel de Ville, St. Quentin, France ... II. Tootal-Broadhurst, Esq.
COPLEY FIELDING
The White Cliffs of Albion E. Atkinson, Esq.
DAVID COX
The Rainbow J. Gillott, Esq.
Meeting of the Llugwy and the Conway... Rev. T. W. Jex-Blake, E. D.
COPLEY FIELDING
Bow Hill Downs Abel Buckley, Esq.
E. LUNDGREN
The Sultana W. Walton, Esq.
Commissioner Yeh Trustees of the late E. Ilermon
LOUIS HAGHE
The Sebreel, or Holy Well at Cairo ... J. Broughton Dugdale, Esq,
SAMUEL PALMER
Calypso’s Island Jesse Haworth, Esq.
W. W. DEANE
Jedburgh Mrs. Deane
COPLEY FIELDING
Lancaster Abraham Haworth, Esq.
F. W. TOPHAM
Loitering F. Craven, Esq,
T. DANBY
Sir Calidore Rev. C. J, Sale
n
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!h
'1 !
: 336
m •ivfr wirrrn^" -mr#-
GALLERY No. 11.
1174
COPLEY FIELDING
Rough AA'ater
. G. W. Moss^ Esq. 1
DAVID COX
1175
The Retreat of Claveriiouse
. ... F. Craven.^ Esq.
1176
S. PROUT
Temple of the Sibyl
... John Platt, Esq.
SCREEN.
1177
F. TAYLER, R.W.S.
Woodland Hunting
W. Gilbey, Esq.
1178
DAVID COX
Sketch in Carnarvonshire
.... Peter xillen. Esq.
S. J. HODSON
1179
Palace of the Doge (Venice)
F. Green, Esq.
1180 '
T. S. COOPER, R.A.
Mountain Sheep
.. John Jjomajc, Esq.
1181
SIR J. D. LINTON, P.R.I.
Alice Lee
. C. J. S. Lock, Esq.
1182 i
W. CALLOW
Street Scene, Chester
Rev. C. J. Sale
i
1
S. J. HODSON
1183
Fruit Market, Nuremberg
1
W. EYRE WALKER
1184
Autumn in Sherwood Forest
E. Harris, Esq.
1185
SIR J. D. LINTON, P.R.I.
Gil Blas
. (j . J aS. Lock, Esq.
1186
T. S. COOPER, R.A. ^ 1
Winter Theuiis Johnson^ Es<p |||
1 i 1187
E. J. POYNTER, R.A.
A Surrey Arcadia
. Charles Wills, Esq.
1188
T. S. COOPER, R.A.
Summer ‘A x
hewlis Johnson, Esq.
E. Atkinson, Esq.
1189
G. A. PRIPP, R.W.S.
GoRTKfl
1 1190
COPLEY FIELDING
1 Highland Lake
.Jesse llaivorth, Esq.
1 1191
F. TAYLER, R.W.S.
Otter Hounds
E. BANCROFT
1 1192
\
s
A Sunny Day, Devonshire
The Artist
GALLERY No. 11
W. SIMPSON, R.I.
Bahr-el-Khebeer ; or, The Great Sea. Rock-Cut Cistern
Under the Site of Solomon’s Temple. . . IF. JJarrison, Esq., M. r
J. W. WHYMPER, R.I.
Richmond Castle
HARRY HINE, R.I.
Lindfield, Sussex
G. A. FRIPP, R.W.S,
Old Windmill on the Sussex Coast Nir Prescott Ilewett, Bart.
BIRKET FOSTER, R.W.S.
Bird-Nesting II. P. Gitbey, Esn
Mrs. Dewhurst
P. II. Rathhone, Esq.
J. MACWHIRTER, A.R.A,
Genoa
John Pender, Esq,
CUTHBERT RIGBY.
Among the Cumberland Fells
A. GOODWIN, R.W.S.
Abingdon Churchyard
Humphrey Roberts, Esq.
The Shepherdess
F. Craven, Esq.
W. HUNT
Bird’s Nest and Apple Blossom
J. Gillott, Esq.
F. SEYMOUR HADEN
(Original Etchings.)
Six Studies in Dry Point . .
River Scene, with Shipping
Forest Scene
A Ruin, with Two Cows ..
The Artisi
Ditto
Ditto
Dttto
mr— - ~-nil
2 !
1
GALLERY No. 11.
1 1
F. SEYMOUR HADEN-con^»iwcd. 1 11
i 1218
Cattle in Water
1219
A Lancashire River
Ditto 1
1220
«
The Breaking Up of the Old Agamemnon
H. FURNISS
I
1 1221
A Back Seat, April 1st, 1886 (pen and ink)
i 1222
The House in Utopia, 1884 (pen and ink)
! 1223
T. S. COOPER, R.A.
Sheep
V. K. Armitaje^ Esq.
A. P. NEWTON
1224
Shattered Desolation — Ruins of the Parthenon, Athens
ir. J. Carver, Esq. f
j 1225
A. WATERHOUSE, R.A.
Taormina, Sicily
SIR P. LEIGHTON, P.R.A.
1
1 1226
The Sea Giving Up its Dead (original design for St. Paul’s). . . The Artist 1 1|
W. HOLMAN HUNT
1227
Plain of Rephaim from Zion Abraham Haworth^ Esq. | ||
1228
Nazareth Abraham Haworth.^ Esq. | ||
1229
Cairo: Sunset from the Gebel Mokattum ... .
..Jesse Haworth, Esq. |
JOHN TENNIEL, R.I.
1230
iEoLUS, Ruler of the Storms (Pencil Drawing
for Punch,
April 6, 1878)
The Artist
H. FURNISS
1231
The Irish at Bow Street (pen and ink)
DAVID COX
\
1 1232
Windsor — Cavalry Exercising
....Abel Buckley, Esq. \
J. H. D’EGVILLE
1 1233
The Lagunes of Venice Sir Prescott llewett^ Bart. II r
j
B. G. THOMSON
1 1234
Glimpses into Fairyland
The Artist R
I
W. MULRBADY, R.A.
1235
Crossing the Brook (Chalk Drawing)
Thomas Johnson, Esq.
S. LiWRBNCB
1236
The Late Anthony Trollope, the Celebrated Novelist E
(Crayon)
j
W. MULRBADY, R.A.
5 1237
Tue Last Ix (Chalk)
J. E. Taylor, Esq.
. 1 ;
'
i
1257
1258
GALLERY No. 11. 33
R. CALDECOTT
The Great Panjandrum Himself C. 21. Roychy Esq.
W. MULRBADY. R.A.
Choosing the AYedding Goavn (Chalk) Earl of Northbrook
W. WILLIAMS
The Late Lord Palmerston (Prime Minister, 1855-58 and
1859-65) Lord Mount Temple
S. PROUT
To^vn Hall at Utrecht R. R. Ross^ Esq.
R. CALDECOTT
“Come Lassies and Lads’^ C. M. Royds^ Esq.
DAVID COX
Darley Church (Moonlight) Rev. C. J. Sale
SIR E. LANDSEER, R.A
Stags Fighting (Chalk DraMdng) Lady Scott
The AA^ounded Hound Lady Scott
AA^ell Packed Lady Scott
AA^aiting for the Load Sir F. 2Iillbank, Bart.
Pointers Sir F. Millbank, Bart.
P. DE WINT
Hay Harvest Peter Allen^ Esq.
JOHN TENNIEL R.I.
Our Isthmian Games (a Gladstonian Derby, 1872, Punchy
A'ol. 64, chalk) J. C. Haslam, Esq.
Punch’s Celebration of Queen Victoria’s Jubilee (pen and
ink) The Artist
AA'here Are AA’’e Now? (pencil. Original Drawing for Punch.) The Artist
F. WALKER, A.R.A.
The AAgrants (pen and ink) J. P. Heseltine.) Esq.
LINLEY SAMBOURNE
I Design for Punch (pen and ink. See Almanack, 1884) ...The Artist
H. FURNISS
The Gainsborough Show at the Grosvenor Gallery (our
own private view — pen and pencil) The Artist
Essence of Parliament (pen and ink) The Artist
JOHN TENNIEL. R.I.
xV Jubilee Pageant (design for Punch, pen and ink) The Artist
At the Gates of the Temple of Janus (pen and ink. Original
i Drawing {ovPunch) The Artist
GALLERY No. 11
LINLEY SAMBOURNE
The Knight and the Flea (an Unrecorded Trial of the Middle
Ages. See Almanack, 1879) The Artist
CHARLES KEENE
Drawing for “ Punch ” (pen and ink) The Artist
Boy Fishing The Artist
LINLEY SAMBOURNE
Art in Olympus, or the Academia of the Gods (pen and
ink) The Artist
H. FURNISS
The Original Design in Pen and Ink, Kindly Executed
BY THE Artist, for the Cover of the Catalogue
OF the Fine Art Section Mrs. Agnew
A Good Advertisement (Pen and Ink) The Artist
LINLEY SAMBOURNE
Design for “ Punch ” (pen and ink) The Artist
CHARLES KEENE
Design for Preface to “ Punch ” The Artist
f
GALLERY No. 12. — Water Colour Drawings
J. PULLEYLOVE, R.I.
Bushey Park The Artist
A. W. HUNT, R.W.S.
Bay of Naples Ilum'phrey Roberts^ Esq.
A. GOODWIN, R.W.S.
Canterbury Humjyhrey Roberts^ Esq>
G. CROZIER
Gleam Through the Mist TT^. E. Houghton^ Esr^
T. M. RICHARDSON, R.W.S.
Val di Noto, near Scordia, Sicily R. P. Harding^ Esg.
C. GREEN, R.I.
Bartholomew Fair IV. Carver, Esq.
W. HOLMAN HUNT
Jerusalem during Bamazan Jesse Haworth, Esg.
A. W. HUNT, R.W.S.
Durham IlumqJirey Roberts Esq.
J. PARKER
Little Nell and her Grandfather Joseph Moseley, Esq.
BASIL BRADLEY, R.W.S.
Motherless ... G. Boulton, Esq.
G. CLAUSEN
Hedgers B. J. Ward, Esq.
F. POWELL, R.W.S.
Loch Duich F. Craven, Esq.
J. ORROCK, R.I.
Dandie Dinmont’s Waste, near Bowcastle W. B. Hobson, E.9q.
H. MOORE, A.R.A.
Herring Boats, Loch Fyne T. R. WilHnso7i, Esq.
KEELEY HALSWELLE, A.R.S.A.
South Coast He^iry Whitehead, Esq.
JOSEPH KNIGHT, R.I.
The Last of the Light 7?. Curtis. Esq.
R. CALDECOTT
W. Lockett Agnew, Esq.
342
GALLERY No. 12.
J. H. D’EGVILLB
1284
Neau Venice Sir
Prescott Hewitt^ Bart.
G. A. FRIPP, R.W.S.
1285
Axgera from the Heights above Arona .
E. A thinsor, Esq.
J. W. NORTH, R.W.S.
1286
Acorn Gatherers
E. Naylor^ Esq.
T. W. WILSON, R.I.
1287
Departure of the Coldstream Guards for the Soudan 1 II
The Artist
-
P. M03CHELLES
1288
The Pretty Toy of the East
CARL HAAG, R.W.S.
1289
The Roman Eorum
G. ir. Esq.
1290
The Sphynx of Giza (A Caravan of Bedouins
encamping
against an approaching Sandstorm)
SIR F. W. BURTON.
1291
Helen Faucit (In the play of Antigone ”)
Miss Margaret Stohes
H. HERKOMEB, A.R.A.
1292
Portrait of John Rl’skin, Esq., LL.D
KEELEY HALSWELLE, A.R.S.A. 1 1
1293
On the Thames (A Summer’s Day)
.. II. II. Bolton, Esq- 1 1
' BIRKET FOSTER. R.W.S. 1 1
1294
A Country Lane ...
... John Pender, Esq. 1 H
T. M. RICHARDSON, R.W.S. 1 1
1295
Lake Como
Charles Langton, Esq. 1 1
BIRKET FOSTER, R.W.S. 1 1
1296
Warksburn, Northumberland Abraham Haivorth, Esq. 1 1
' CARL HAAG, R.W.S.
1297
The Remains of the Temples of Baalbec
Mrs. Platt
C. EARLE, R.I.
i 1298
Ferry on the Wensum
The Artist
i
j
CLARA MONTALBA
1299
Riva degli Schiavoni, Venice
E. BURNE JONES, A.R.A. 1 1
1300
The Annunciation
]V. Coltart, Esq.
1301
Green Summer
1302
The Hesperides
F. Craven, Esq.
1303
Love Amongst the Ruins
E. Craven, EJsq.
BRITON RIVIERE, R.A.
1304
Daniel in the Lions’ Den
Ed. Ci'oss, Esq.
ll‘-rT — — ■!
i
GALLERY No. 12.
343
1
F. MADOX BROWN
1305
The Dream of Sardanapalus
E. Craven, Esq.
MARK FISHER, R.I.
1306
Cows NEAR THE FARMSTEAD Henry Whitehead^ Esq,
1
R. ANDERSON, A.R.S.A.
1307
Hauling the Line
James Ashcroft, Esq.
P. H. CALDERON, R.A.
1308
Juliet Waiting for the Nurse Edward Broadhurst^ Esq.\
W. DUNCAN
1309
Love, Scandal, and Politics
R. S. Wyndham I
BIRKET FOSTER, R.W.S.
1310
Flom^er Market at Toulon
....II. P. Gilhey, Esq.
J. D. WATSON, R.W.S.
1311 1
A Wee Drop too Much
.Joseqlh Moseley, Esq.
A. H. MARSH
1312
Blow! Blow! Thou Wintry Wind J. Galloivay, jun.^ Esq.\
H. S. MARKS, R.A.
1313
Thoughts of Christmas Andrew Knowles^ jun.^ Esq.\
A. D. FRIPP, R.W.S.
1314
The Fisherman’s Home
G. Philiq), Esq j
T. M. RICHARDSON, R.W.S. I
1315
Rumbling Bridge, Perthshire
1316
C. GREEN, R.I.
' A Country Circus
A. W. HUNT, R.W.S.
1317
SciiLOss Eltz, Germany
G. W. Moss, Esq.
SIR F. W. BURTON
1318
Peasants of Upper Franconia Waiting for
Confession
Edxmrd ScJmncl-, Esq., F.A.nJ
CLARA MONTALBA.
1319
: A Sirocco Day, Venice
1320
T. COLLIER, R.I.
A Summer Sea
1321
G. A. FRIPP, R.W.S.
Glen Rosa, Arran
1322
F. MADOX BROWN
The Entombment
K
..II. Poddington, Esq
f
344
GALLERY No. 12.
1
1
SIR J. D. LINTON, P.R.I.
i
1323
The Admonition J. Galloivat/, Jun., E>q. 1 |l|
1
1324 ^
Off Guard C.
J. Galloway, Esq.
i
C. POTTER
1325 :
The Street of Tombs, Pompeii
,.li. Collin ge, Esq.
I
T. COLLIER, R.I.
1326
The New Forest from Lymington
....J. Or rod', Esq.
1
SIR J. D, LINTON, P.R.I.
1327 ;
The Cardinal Minister J. Galloway^ jun.^ Esq. 1 1
W. J. SLATER
1328
A Pathway near Arundel
1
C. GREEN, R.I.
1329 i
Oranges, Apples, Bills of the Play J. Galloivay^ jun.^ Esq. 1 ||
i
H. G. HINE, R.I.
1
1330 .
The Downs at Lewes
....J. Orroclc, Esq. ||
WYKE BAYLISS
1
1331 1
Interior of Westminster Abbey The Corporation of Nottingham 1 ||
!
J. AUMONIEB, R.I.
1332
South Hastings
E. J. GREGORY, A.R.A.
1333 I
Last Touches C. J. Galloway, Esq. 1 1
j
A. WATERHOUSE, R.A.
1334 1
1
Cathedral of Chartres
i
C. WERNER
1335
Temple of Philce
G. W. Moss, Esq.
A. D. PRIPP, R.W.S.
1336
The Stair Hall
.. G. Philip, Esq.
W. WYLD
1337
Vt^vtor ,
Mrs. Platt
G. A. FRIPP, R.W.S.
1338
Nant Fran con. North Wales
.G. ir. Esq.
A. C. GOW, A.R.A.
1339
Coaching in the Olden Times E. L. Chance, Esq. 1 1
A. D. FRIPP, R.W.S.
r
2
1340
The Barley Field
... G. Philip, Esq.
S
P. TAYLER, R.W.S.
5
■
1341
Returning from the Hunt
.. W. Gilley
!
R. ANDERSON, A.R.S.A.
1342
Waiting for a Nibble
J. A. Beith, Esq.
1
I
1
GALLERY No. 12.
The Hospice, Pass of the Simplon
R. r. Harding^ Esq.
SIR J. D. LINTON. P.R.I.
J. Orroch, Esq.
Priscilla,
GEORGE DU MAURIER
Time’s Revenge
The Artist
Summer
E. Atlcinson, Esq.
E. BURNE JONES, A.R.A.
Cupid and Psyche
F. MADOX BROWN
Elijah and The Widow’s Son
F. Craven^ Esq
Naworth Castle, Cumberland
R. THORNEWAITE, R.W.S,
The Half-way House
J. Edward Reiss^ Esq.
Henry Whitehead^ Esq.
Falstaff
SIMEON SOLOMON
A Lady in a Chinese Dress
W. Coltart, Esq.
H. Tootal-Broadhurst^ Esq.
The Two Foscari
T. M. RICHARDSON
Abraham Haworth, Esq.
Portree, Isle of Skye,
The Standard Bearer
C. J. Galloway, Esq
Mrs. Hugh Mason
A Carmelite Monk
A. W. HUNT, R.W.S.
The Rainbow
F. Craven, Esq.
Loch Scavaig, Isle of Skye
The Gamekeeper’s Daughter
CxALLERY No. 12.
T. M. RICHARDSON, R.W.S.
The Via Mala, Grisoxs, Switzerland F. D. Brocldehirst^ Esq.
R. THORNEWAITE, R.W.S.
Oatfield, Hamfshire The Artisi
Bringing Down the Kye
AVeighing the Deer
Hawking
. y. Echersley, Esq.
G. W. Moss, Esq.
F. Craven, Esq.
GUIDO R.
Alms Day at the Ara Cceli, Ro^ie
C>qdain Meehing
H. CLARENCE WHAITE, R.W.S,
The Legendary Castle of Arran
Snow in Harvest C.
W. LANGLEY, R.I,
Waiting for the Boats
IV. II. Michael, Esq., Q.C.
Sisterly Help
C. B. PHILLIP
Ben Cruachan, Argyleshire G. M. Burnett, Esq.
J. R. HERBERT, R.A.
Doge Dandelo If. Tootal-Broadhurst, Esq.
SIMEON SOLOMON
The Sleepers and the One that Waketit E. Craven, Esq.
P. DICKSEE, A.R.A.
Constance and Salisbury If'; ^S'. Hastings, Esq^
Othello and Desdemona IF. S. Hastings, Esq.
SIR J. GILBERT, R.A.’
Scene from Catherine and Petructiio E. Peacoch, Esq., J/.P
E. A. GOODALL, R.W.S.
A Street in Cairo, near the Coppersmiths’ Bazaar. Mrs. Hugh Mason.
A. W. HUNT, R.W.S.
Tynemouth Pier Ilumjdireg Poherts, Esq.
S. J. HODSON, R.W.S.
A Boy’s Dream John Lomax, Esn.
J. D. WATSON, R.W.S,
An Ambuscade
Henry Whitehead, Esq.
GALLERY No. 12.
Overtaken by the Tide
W. BrocJibanJi, Esq.
St. George
C. J. Galloway., Esq.
G. A. FRIPP, R.W.S.
View from King’s House Looking Towards Glencoe
Mrs. Potter
HARRY HINE, R.I.
Ely Cathedral
Walter Harding^ Esq
W. DUNCAN
Le Jardin D’x^mour
C. J. STANILAND, R.I.
Priscilla J. Macandrew., Esq.
II. M. MARSHALL, R.W.S.
vHew on the Thames Sir Richard Webster, Q.G., M.P.
J. ORROCK, R.I.
Bird Oswald Valley with River Irthing TF. W. Lewis, Esq.
Something Wrong Somewhere
ir. II. HoMdsivorth, Esq., M.P.
The Grandmother
C. WERNER
A Church in Florence
North Sea Trawlers
Solitude
Holbrook Gaskell, Esq.
The Palm Offering
E. F. BREWTNALL, R.W.S.
J. Galloway, Jan., Esq.
Visit to the Witch
R. REDFERN
W. Redftrn, Esq.
Summer
Dame Durden
T. COLLIER, R.I
Arundel Park
Mrs. Barton
W. ARTINGSTALL
H. CLARENCE WHAITE, R.W.S.
The Castle Kock, Cumberland Corporation of Liverpool
I
i
f.
I
i
§
348
1400
1401 j
i
i
1402 I
1403 I
I
1404 :
1405 I
1406
1407
1408
1409
1410
1411
GALLERY No. 12.
SIR J. GILBERT, R.A.
Falstaff G. W. Moss, Esq.
W. D. BARKER
A Flood The Artist
SIR J. GILBERT, R.A.
Richard II. Resigning the Crown IF. Can'er, Esq.
Joan of Arc’s Entry into Orleans Ihtmphrei/ Eoherts, Esq.
R. ANDERSON, A.R.S.A.
Herring Fishing off the Forfarshire Coast W. R. Moss, Esq-
A. D. FRIPP, R.W.S.
Pompeii G. Philip, Esq.
SIR J. GILBERT, R.A.
Battle of Marston Moor Humphrey Roberts, Esq.
W. MORTON
Myerscough-le-Fylde (with the Bleasdale Hills) W. Rose, Esq-
BASIL BRADLEY, R.W.S.
Lost E. J. Long ton. Esq., M.D.
W. EYRE WALKER
The Edge of the Combe Miss Alice Cooper
F. J. SHIELDS
Solomon Eagle C. J. Pooley, Esq.
H. MEASHAM
A Welsh Farmstead Edward Evans, Esq.
CARL HAAG, R.W.S.
Temple of Fortlna James Jardine, Esq
BRITON RIVIERE, R.A.
Orpheus Playing to the Brutes Humphrey Roberts, Esq
JOSEPH KNIGHT, R.I.
The Shore near Harlech G. Bulloch, Esq.
F. TAYLER, R.W.S
Going to the Chase IF. Gilbey, Esq.
BIRKET FOSTER, R.W.S.
An Old Mill J. W. Ilaigh, Esq.
SCREEN.
G. A. FRIPP. R.W.S.
Aberdeenshire Dee G. Moss^ Esq.
F. GOODALL, R.A.
Hagar and Isiimael Abraham Haworth, Esq.
(GALLERY No. 12,
The Coupee, Sark
Mrs. Potter
W. B. Marshall, Esq.
The Pilgrimage
HELEN ALLINGHAM
The Pensioner’s Garden
Charles Churchill, Esq
E. BURNE JONES, A.R.A.
Mrs. W. A. Turner
Pyramus and Thisbe
SIR J. E. MILLAIS, BART., R.A.
The Black Brunswicker
Jesse Haworth, Esq,
The Convent Garden
J)r. Orrock
J. D. WATSON, R.W.S,
Taking Home the Maypole
Henry Whitehead, Esq.
G. A. FRIPP, R.W.S.
Sir Richard Webster, Q.C., M.l
SoNNiNG Wood
Orpheus Charming the Beasts
Edward Broadhurst, Esq.
J. W. WHYMPER, R.I,
Coast Scene, Early Morning
C. Combe, Esq.
A. C. GOW, A.R.A.
The Alchymist
H. F. Makins, Esq.
SIR F. W. BURTON.
Shireen
Abraham Haworth, Esq.
J. A. CROZIER
Feeding Turkeys
W. H. Houghtori, Esq.
SIR J. E. MILLAIS, BART., R.A,
The Minuet
Abraham Haworth, Esq.
A Bit of Old Scarborough
F, POWELL, R.W.S,
Nearing Port
W. Lockett Agnew, Esq,
Florence — Cologne — V enice
Giardini Publici, Venice
The Honourable Sir Ford North
H. G. HINE, R.I
South Downs
J, Orrock, Esq.
GALLERY No. 12.
H. S. MARKS, R.A.
1438 A Happy Family at the Zoo John Lomaxy Esq.
F. J. SHIELDS
Mrs. Botsford
SIR J. D, LINTON, F.R.I.
The Trumpeter C. J. S. Locky Esq.
JAMES HARDY, R.I.
Dead Game E. J. Longtony Esq.y M.D.
A. GOODWIN, R,W.S.
The Sole Survivor Humphrey RohertSy Esq.
F. TAYLER, R.W.S.
Highland Cattle W. Lockett Agnewy Esq.
J, D. WATSON, R.W.S.
Calves Er. Lloyd Roberts
W. PILSBURY
Long Grass and Wild Flowers E. Harrisy Esq.
HELEN ALLINGHAM
Nestlers IL G. Crewsy Esq.
J. D. WATSON, R.W.S.
The Rendezvous Dr. Lloyd Roberts
BRITON RIVIERE, R.A.
Com ALA F. W. Graftouy Esq.
“ There Comala sits forlorn ! two grey dogs near
Shake their rough ears, and catch the flying breeze.
Her red cheek rests upon her arm ;
The mountain wind is in her hair ;
She turns her blue eyes towards the field of his promise ;
Where art thou, 0 Fingal ? The night is gathering around.”
Ossian (translated).
R. B. WALLACE
C. Rotvley, Esq.
G. DU MAURIER
1439 The Bread Watcher
i Mariana
La Bangiolinata
The Artist
E. Harveyy Esq.
JAMES T. LINNELL
Abraham llaworthy Esq,
A May Morning
F. MADOX BROWN
F. Gravelly Esq.
Romeo and Juliet
Jesse llaworthy Esq.
Mr. Alderman King
Children on the Sea Shore
Cottage IN Surrey
GALLERY No. 12.
Dead Grouse
E. J. Longton^ AVy., M.D
SIR J. D. LINTON, P.R.I
J. Or rode, E&<i
The Mandolin
A. GOODWIN, R.W.S,
Burning the Tares
Tally Ho !
CUTHBERT RIGBY
Valley of Duddon
J. W. Oddie, Esq.
It’s Not Bedtime Yet
The Unruly Donkey
B. P. Harding, Esq.
JOHN TENNIBL, R.I,
Don Quixote Preparing his Armour
C. J. Galloway, Esq.
SIR J. E. MILLAIS, BART., ‘R. A.
The Order of Release
Proscribed Royalist...
The Huguenot
My First Sermon
Charles Langton, Esq.
Charles Langton, Esq.
SIR J. D. LINTON, P.R.I,
The Reverie
J. Orrock, Esq.
CARL HAAG, R.W.S.
Amphitheatre at Athens
HELEN ALLINGHAM
The Picture Book
James Worthington, Esq.
P. GOODALL, R.A.
Hunt the Slipper
Charles Langton, Esq.
P. J. NAFTEL, R.W.S,
PCESTUM
SIR E. J. MILLAIS, BART., R.A,
My Second Sermon
Charles Langton, Esq.
SIR J. D. LINTON, P.R.I,
Off Guard
L. ALMA TADEMA, R.A.
La Lecture
James Barrow, Esq.
GALLERY No. 12,
BIRKET FOSTER, R.W.S.
A Bit of the Thames
R. P. Harding^ Psq
L. ALMA TADEMA, R.A,
Sponges and Strygels
Antony and Cleopatra
J. Edtvard Reiss, Esq
SIR J. GILBERT, R.A.
Don Quixote and Sancho Panza Edwa
BIRKET FOSTER, R.W.S.
Minding Baby .•
SIR J. D. LINTON, P.R.I,
Wallflowers
J. Orrock, Esq,
CONSTANCE PHILLOTT
G, Philip, Esq
A. GOW, A.R.A.
,. Humphrey Roberts, Esq.
SIMEON SOLOMON
F. Craven, Esq.
“ It Is the voice of my beloved that kuocketh, «ayuig, ‘ Open to me,
my sL-ter, my love, my dove, my uudefiled ; for my head L fitted with
dew, and my locks with the drops of the night.’ ”
E. J. GREGORY, A.R.A.
A Look at the Model C. J. Galloivay, Esq,
H. R. STEER, R.I.
The Unsuccessful Candidate F. A. Swettenham, Esq,
HELEN ALLINGHAM
Thomas Carlyle IP. Allingham, Esq.
(Born Dec. 4, 1795 ; died Feb. 5, 1881.)
“ A great soul, passionate for good,
A mighty brain, a tender heart.
With flaws of temper, glooms of mood :
Judge him according as thou art.”
A. GOODWIN, R.W.S.
Fisherman’s Chapel Hut
HELEN ALLINGHAM
Lessons G.
J. D. WATSON, R.W.S.
The Violin Player
G. P. BOYCE, R.W.S,
Valley of the Wotton, Surrey
Electra
Sheltering
II. Boddington, Esq,
ir. Coltart, Esq.
i
1492
1493 I
1494 I
1495 i
1496 I
1497
1498 '
1499 '
1500
1501
1502 !
1503
1504
GALLERY 13. — Water Colour Drawings.
E. DUNCAN
Carting Ice W . 7 ' homson , Esq .
COPLEY FIELDING
The Downs, near Eastbourne L ' ev . C . J . Sale .
E. DUNCAN
Wreck on the Goodwin Sands G . W . Moss ^ Esq .
SARAH SETCHELL
“Ye shall Walk in Silk Attire” Henry Vaughan , Esq .
P. W. TOPHAM
Gipsy Toilet John Tliomqgson , Esq .^
D. G. ROSSETTI
Washing Hands F . Craven , Esq .
T. DANDY
A Fisherman’s Hojie W . Walton , Esq .
COPLEY FIELDING
Raby Castle, Durham C . E . Lees , Esq .
E. DUNCAN
French Boats in a Squall Joseph Dugdale , Esq .
Ferrying Sheep Across the ^Iedway H . G . Creivs , Esq .
G. CHAMBERS
Signalling the Pilot W . Walton , Esq .
G. J. PINWELL
The Beggar’s Roost, Tangier Rev . C . J . Sale
Gilbert a Becket’s Troth John Jaffray , Esq .
{The Saracen Maiden entering London at Sundoxen.) “ Among the
yeomen of Saxon race whose necessities compelled them to seek the
service of the Norman Barons as esquires or attendants was a man
whose romantic history, no less than the extraordinary career of his son,
caused his name to become famous to a degree which rarely happened
in those days to one of obscure birth. Gilbert a Becket was born in
London in the reign of Henry I. At the beginning of the twelfth
century, Gilbert a Becket followed his lord to the Holy Land. After
having taken part in the ordinary dangers and sufferings of the soldiers
of the Cross, Gilbert was made prisoner and reduced to slavery. In this
condition the Saxon Yeoman attracted the notice of the daughter of a
Saracen chief, and gained her love. With her assistance he succeeded
in effecting his escape, and returned to England. The Baynim damsel
could not live without him, and she determined to find her way to the
distant country whither he had told her he was going. She knew only
two words of English, which were London, and Gilbert. With the help
of the former she obtained a passage in a ship which cai ried returning
pilgrims and traders ; and by means of the latter — wandering through
the country, and repeating ‘ Gilbert ! Gilbert !’ — she at last found the
man she loved. Gilbert a Becket appears to have received her tenderly
and honourably, and, having asked the advice of the clergy, he caused
her to be baptised, and having changed her name to that of Matilda, he
married her. The strange circumstances of this marriage caused it to
become famous throughout the country, and it was made the subject of
various popular ballads and romances, two of which are still extant.”
Y
m
354
GALLERY No. 13.
1505
Florence
J. B. PYNE
1506
W. W. DEANE
The Bull Ring at Seville
SARAH SETCHELL
1507
The Momentous Question
1508
Landscape
DAVID COX
1509
Bolsover Castle ....
W. DYCE, R.A.
1510
Glen Rosa, Isle of
Arran J.
Broughton Dug dale, Esq.
1511
Passing of Arthur.
T. DANBY
1512
Dunster Castle ....
P. DE WINT
1513
High Torr, Derbyshire
1514
Maternal Affection
P. F. POOLE, R.A.
. Thomas Johnson, Esq.
1515
Barnaby Rudge
F. W. TOPHAM
1516 ’
Bruges
S. PROUT
1517 ;
Lancaster
P. DE WINT
T. W. Jex Blake, D.D.
1518 1
Morecambe Bay ....
1519
E. LUNDGREN
The Dominican Friar
Edward Broadhurst, Esq.
1520
Timber Wagon
P. DE WINT
1521
Mountain Spring....
P. F. POOLE, R.A.
1522
Portsmouth
C. STANFIELD, R.A.
C. F. 11. Bolcl-ow, Esq.
1523
Ttte Farafyard
P. DE WINT
J. M. lletherington. Esq.
1524
: SAM BOUGH, R.S.A.
Crossing the Common Jose2)h Broome, Esq.
1525
F. W. TOPHAM
, Gate of the Alhambra
G. DODGSON
1526
1 Carol Singers
1
GALLERY No. 13.
Chamoix
Charles A Lang ton ^ Esq.
S. PROUT
Fish Market, Rome,
G. CATTERMOLE
The Challenge
1537
1538
SARAH SETCHELL
Colin and Jessie T. fi. Withers, Esq.
C. BENTLEY
Wicklow Bay C. E. Lees, Esq.
G. CATTERMOLE
Brigands Disturbed F. Craven, Esq.
Power of Music J. Theivlis Johnson, Esq.
E. DUNCAN
On the Goodwin Sands Jesse Haworth, Esq.
G. CATTERMOLE
Halt of Cavaliers Dr. Lloyd. Roberts
S. PROUT
Dresden Mrs. Botsford.
G. CATTERMOLE
Christ Preaching Abraham Haworth, Esq.
The Bandits H. Tootal-Broadhurst, Esq.
P. DE WINT
Hayfield Peter Allen, Eso.
DAVID COX
Rough Sea after a Storm H. Tootal-Broadhurst, Esq.
P. DE WINT
1541 : Harvest Field Abraham Haworth, Esq,
G. CATTERMOLE
Raising of Lazarus C. F. 11, Bolchoiv, Esq.
t. s. robins
Sea Piece Airs. Dewhurst
COPLEY FIELDING
Coast Scene James Jardine, Esq.
St. Pierre, Caen
S. PROUT
F. Craven, Esq.
G. BARRET
Classical Landscape Abraham Haworth, Esq.
J. H. MOLE
A Leisure Hour G. Philiy), Esq.
S. PROUT
V ENICE James Jardine, Esq.
GALLERY No. 13.
JOHN SELL COTMAN
Bishop’s Tower, Norwich
DAVID ROBERTS, R.A,
Jaffa (Ancient Joppa)
H. BRITTAN WILLIS
Near Guildford
S. PROUT
E. M. WARD, R.A.
Mrs. Bride! I Fox
Mrs. Bridell Fox
On Lake Como
Varenna
Sir Joseiih Heron
Penmaenmawr
SIR A. W. CALLCOTT, R.A,
Mrs. Hugh Mason.
B A ALB EC
DAVID ROBERTS, R.A,
Convent of St. Catherine, Mount Sinai
Castle of Ischia
Jesse Haworth, Esq.
The Thames from Richmond ...
Sunset Study
Walton Bridge, on the 'ITiames
Evening
Walton Bridge, on the Thames.
Arcadia
Classical Composition
Landscape with Cattle
Moonlight
Morning
Landscape with Cattle
//. Tootal-Broadhurst, Esq.
John Platt, Esq.
Sir Joseph Heron.
J. Orrock, Esq.
David Jardine, Esq.
Thomas Barnes, Esq.
J. Gillott, Esq.
Mrs. Botsford.
R. R. Ross, Esq.
J. Or rock, Esq.
J. Orrock, Esq.
E. DUNCAN
Storm at Sea
Phe Rialto
GALLERY No. 13.
D. G. ROSETTI
The Brunette lion. C. W. Milh
Francesca da Rimini W. R. J/o.s-.s, Esq.
Francesca, daughter of Guido da Polenta, loul of Kaverna, was
married to Lanciotto, son of Malatestata da Rimini. She, however, fell in
love with her husband’s brother Paola, and the lovers being discovered
by Lanciotto, he put them both to death. — Dante's Inferno, Canto. V.
JAMES HOLLAND
Innspruck J. Or rock, Esq.
W. W. DEANE
Chamber of the Council of Ten, Venice Mrs. Deane
JAMES HOLLAND
Cadiz Mrs. Botsford
The Jesuit Church of S. Maria del Rosario Mrs. Perrins
The Dogana, Venice F. Craven, Esq
J. F. LEV/IS, R.A.
Newhaven Fish women R. R. Ross, Esq.
JAMES HOLLAND
Life in Venice Mrs. Botsford
Lion of St. Mark Venice F. Craven, E^q.
W. NESFIELD
Fingal’s Cave, Staffa
J. P. LEWIS, R.A.
Seville
A Reception in the Harem,
Encampment in the Desert
A Street in Cairo
Camels in the Desert
Peter Allen, Esq.
Ahel Buckley, Esq.
..• G. W. Moss, Esq.
Edward Broadhurst, Eq.
Charles Lanejton, Es .
JOHN LINNELL
^ydlianl Acjnew, Esq.
William Agneiv, IBq.
Pastoral Landscape
Eel Pie House, Twickenham
H. J. JOHNSON
Stone Cross on Dartmoor
J. Macandrew, E^q.
W. COLLINS, R.A,
Coast Scene
David Jar dine, Esq.
T. DANBY
River Llugwv
Ben Burne, Perthshire
Walter Field, E
L. Blumfield, E
T. UWINS, Esq,
Fiametta
C. F. llinslielwood. Esq.
y353F'<'ir' fM- IT .1
358
GALLERY No. 13.
J. B. PYNB
1597 Head of Lago Maggiore
i F. W. TOPHAM
1598
1599
Ballinasloe Fair.
Mrs. Platt.
,J. Milne Cheetham^ Esq.
T. DANBY
A Summer Morning J. Warren^ Esq.
P. DE WINT
1600 Landscape and Cattle II. Tootal-Broadhursi^ Esq.
1601
1602
1603
Loch Lomond
Off the East Coast
COPLEY FIELDING
G. W. Moss, Esq.
.Peter Allen, Esq.
G. BARRET
Sunset J. Orrock, Esq.
S. PROUT
1604 i Bridge of Sighs, Venice Dr. 'Lloyd Roberts.
P. DE WINT
1605 I Cornfield II. Tootal-Broadhurst, Esq.
1606 ; 'J"he Glebe Farm Abraham Haworth, Esq.
j COPLEY FIELDING •
1607 I Shipwreck J. M. Iletherington, Esq.
I H. GASTINEAU
1608 View in Wales, with I^uins II. G. Crews, Esq.
P. DE WINT
Saltwood Castle, Kent Peter Allen, Esq.
Lincoln Cathedral James Jardine, Esq.
1609
1610
1611
COPLEY FIELDING
South Downs .-. i David Jardine, Esq.
1612 ; Arundel TF. II. Ilouldsworth, Esq., M.P.
1 W. L. LEITCH
1613 j'GuLF OF Genoa J. Macandrew, Esq.
COPLEY FIELDING
1614 j Snowdon J. M. Iletherington, Esq.
\ W. MULLER
1615 I Acropolis, Athens Peter Allen, Esq.
! G. BARRET
1616 i Landscape with Cattle Mrs. Botsford
! C. VACHER
1617 I Naples, from the Villa Bansillipo ./. A. Bannerman, Esq.
' COPLEY FIELDING
1618 : Loch Etive Charles Langton, Esq.
\ JOHN LINNELL
1619 , Morning — Peasants with Cattle Jesse Haworth, Esq.
GALLERY No. 13.
SAM BOUGH, R.S.A,
h Broome. Ey
Brough Sands
S. PROUT
Strasburg J. J/. Hetherington^ Esq,
JAMES HOLLAND
Rialto, Venice Dr. Lloyd Roberts
W. MULLER
Xanthus Valley W. Carver, Esq.
The Harpagus Tomb, Lycia Sir Joseph Heron |
COPLEY FIELDING
Fairlight Downs //. Tootal-Broadhurst, Esq.
Sunset at Sea 2Irs. Hugh Mason
W. HUNT
A Warm Berth Peter Allen, Esq.
COPLEY FIELDING |
Near Dunster (Somersetshire) Mrs. Hugh Mason j
W. NESFIELD J
Falls of the Clyde T. M. Shuttleivorth, Esq.
S. PROUT
1630 i The Foscari and Balbi Palaces, Venice Duhe of Devonshire
\ LOUIS HAGHE
1631 Brewers’ Hall, Antwerp Abraham Haivorth, Esq.
1632 j Milan Cathedral G. W. Moss, Esq.
! DAVID COX • I
1633 ^ Wreck on the North Coast F. Craven, Esq. \
1634 I Heather Gatherers F. Craven, Esq. \
I ;
I W. NESFIELD ;
1635 Brancepth Park T. M. Shuttleivorth Esq. ;
i LOUIS HAGHE
1636 I Visit of Marguerite of Austria, the Regent of Belgium, ;
I TO THE Audience Chamber of Bruges J. TP. Haigh, Esq. •
1637 j The Sistine Chapel, Rome R. M. Knowles, Esq. \
DAVID COX !
1638 I The Missing Flock F. Craven, Esq. '
1639 ‘ Beeston Castle F. Craven, Esq. ‘
1640 ! Gravel-pits F. Craven, Esq. \
ELIJAH WALTON |
1641 A. Wind-storm in the Engadine G. F. Hinshehvood, Esq. j
! llR*
360
GALLERY No. 13.
1642
W. HUNT
Devotion
1643
LOUIS HAGHE
Arnold Defending His PiuNCirLES in the
Consistory at
1644
Rome
DAVID COX
The Welsh Funeral
1645
C. CATTERMOLE
Grace Before Meat
1646
The Knight and the Falconer
1647
W. J. NASH
Eton from the Meadows
1648
DAVID COX
JlOLTON AbBEV 11
. Tootal-Broadhurst, Esq.
1649
Milking-time
1650
G. DODGSON
\Vhitby Abbey
1651
C. VACHER
Lake Scene
J. A. Banner man, Esc/.
1
1652 *
1
DAVID COX
Mmndsor Great Park
1653
D. MACLISE, R.A.
The Marriage of Eva and Strongbo'w.../. Broughton DugdaU, Esq.
1
j
1654
Richard of Clare, Earl of Pembroke, who bore the nickname of
Strongbow, landed in Ireland with a force of fifteen hundred men to
assist Dermot, King of Leinster, to recover his dominions, which had
been wrested from him in one of the endless civil wars that distracted
Ireland. The city of Dublin was taken by surprise, and after the battle,
Strongbow’ was married to Eva, the daughter of Dermot, thus becoming
heir to the kingdom of Leinster, (a.d. 1169.)
Green s History of the English People.
H. BRITTAN WILLIS
; (Attle in the Highlands 11. Peacock, Esq., M.P.
1655
P. W. TOPHAM
, A Zouave Relating his Adventures ... J. Broughton Dugclale, Esq.
1656
G. DODGSON
Fete Champetre
1657
i SAM BOUGH
The Rain Cloud
1658
DAVID COX
'Phe Vale of Cl^vyd
1659
D. G. ROSSETTI
1 Rosa Triplex
GALLERY No. 13.
361
1660
WILLIAM TURNER, of Oxford
Portsmouth C. E. Lees^ Esq.
1661
DAVID COX
Bolton Park
C. F. H. Bolckow, Esq.
1662
S. PROUT
Caen
1663
D. G. ROSSETTI
Return of Tibullus to Delia
1664
P. DE WINT
Corn Harvest
Peter A Her, Esq.
1665
W. COLLINS, R.A.
Fisherman’s Bay, Isle of Wight
Peter Allen, Esq.
1666
DAVID ROBERTS, R.A.
Heidelberg Charles Langton, Esq. I
1667
DAVID COX
The Humber at Hull
R. R. /loss. Esq.
1668
S. PROUT
Nuremberg
1669
JOHN CALLOW
Off Dover Edivard Sclmnch, Esq., F.R.S.
1670
DAVID COX
Besom Gatherers
1671
COPLEY FIELDING
The Trossachs
C. F. H. Botclzoxe, Esq.
1672
S. PROUT
Nuremberg
1673
DAVID COX
Hardwick Hall
Peter Alien, Esq.
1674
W. HULL
A Yorkshire Scar
..T. R. ^yilldnson, Esq.
1675
A. E. CHALON, R.A.
Lady Macbeth (Act V.)
Louis lluth, Dsq-
1676
Lady Macbeth (Act I.)
IjOuis Hutli, Esq.
1677
J. CRISTALL
] x-Vt the Spring
U. G. Crews, Esq.
1678
D. G. ROSSETTI
• The Lady Lilith
1679
SAMUEL PALMER
Oxen Ploughing
J. S. Bolton, Esq.
1680
' W. MULLER
1 A Welsh River
— ^
i COPLEY FIELDING
1681 The Mull of Galloway
W. T alter sail ^ Esq.
E. DUNCAN
1682 Shiplake-ox-Thames G. TL J/os5, Esq.
SCREEN.
DAVID COX.
1683 The Enraged Bull II. Tootal-Broadhurst^ Esq.
H. BRITTAN WILLIS
1684 ! Cattle (Mid-day) Jesse Haworth., Esq
RICHARD DOYLE
1685 Rose Red and Snow White IF. Long., Esq.
\ WILLIAM HUNT
10gg I Dead Wood-Pigeon J. Orroch, Esq.
: JOHN LINNELL
10g7 An English Landscape C. F. II. Bolchow, Esq.
RICHARD DOYLE
1688 Elves in a Rabbit AYarren
TF. Long, Esq.
WILLIAM HUNT
Too Hot ! C. F. II. Bolckow, Esq.
DAVID ROBERTS, R.A
1690 ' the Slave Market, Cairo Dr. Lloyd Roberts
W. L. LEITCH
1691 i Tower in the Gulf of Salerno G. W. Moss, Esq.
i WILLIAM HUNT
1692 , Bullases and Blackberries J. OrrocJc, Esq.
1693 ; The Shy Sitter J. Orrock, Esq.
1694 Plums and Flowers J . Orrock, Esq.
Girl With Pitcher J. Orrock, Esq.
WILLIAM TURNER, of Oxford
View FROM Bishop’s Hill, Gloucestershire ...Jawies Worthington, Esq.
G. BARRET
Flight into Egypt T. R. Wilkinson, Esq.
W. MULLER
Eel Traps at Goring Peter Allen, Esq.
E. DUNCAN
1699 Haunt of the Wild-Fowl Charles Langton, Esq.
1 WILLIAM HUNT
1700 ' Pine Apple and Plums
Jesse Haworth, Esq
GALLERY No. 13.
C. STANFIELD, R.A.
Calais Old Pier Sir Joseph Heron.
WILLIAM HUNT
Bird’s Nest and Primroses J. Gillott^ Esq.
The Defeat G. W. Moss, Esq.
Quinces J. Orrock, Esq,
W. L. LEITCH
Glen Shee, Aberdeenshire G. W. Moss, Esq.
J. H. MOLE
A Young Fisherman G. F. Ilinshelwood, Esq.
P. DE WINT
Bolsover Castle James Worrall, Jun., Esq.
J. D. HARDING
Chateau de Monat A. Pilkington, Esq.
DAVID COX
Asking the Way Peter ..lien. Esq.
WILLIAM HUNT
Portrait of the Artist II. P, Gilhey, Esq.
S. PROUT
Rouen Colonel Sale
C. STANFIELD, R.A.
Castle of Chillon, Lake Geneva Peter Allen, Esq.
WILLIAM HUNT
Magnum-bonum Plums J. Orrock, Esq.
DAVID ROBERTS, R.A.
Hall of the Abencerages, Granada Mrs. Hugh Mason
JOHN LINNELL
River Scene — Sunset William Agnew, Esq.
JOHN LEECH
Original Drawing for “ Punch ” William Agnew, Esq.
Small Boy : “Oh, yes, I understand French, because I know that
when mamma and papa speak French I am going to have a powder.”
WILLIAM HUNT
G. W. AIoss, Esq.
P. DE WINT
James Worrall, jun.. Esq.
WILLIAM HUNT
OSES G. W. Moss, Esq.
'JD Grapes J. Orrock, Esq.
J. D. HARDING
A. Pilkington, Esq.
The Attack
Windsor Castle
Royat
364 GALLERY No. 13.
JOHN LINNELL
1722 Landscape with Sheep J. Broughton Dugdale^ Esq.
DAVID ROBERTS, R.A.
1723 Houses of Parliament Sir Joseq^h Heron
WILLIAM HUNT
1724 Jim Crow J. OrrocJc^ Esq.
S. PROUT
1725 Place de la Pucelle, Orleans Colonel Sale
WILLIAM HUNT
1726 The Valentine H. Tootal-Broadhurst., Esq.
1727 Peaches and Grapes J. Orrock^ Esq.
1728 The Scrub F. Craven^ Esq.
1729 Head of a Girl 11. P. Gilley^ Esq.
1730 The Blessing J. Orrock, Esq.
1731 Ha^vthorn and Bird’s Nest J. Orrock^ Esq.
, W. MULLER
1732 I Lake Telemessus W. Carver.^ Esq.
I JOHN VARLEY
1733 Landscape T. R. Wilkinson, Esq.
WILLIAM HUNT
1734 The Old Gardener James Jardine, Esq
P. DE WINT
1735 Wet Meadows Peter Allen, Esq
G. SHALDERS
1736 Surrey Landscape II. G. Crews, Esq.
WILLIAM HUNT
1737 Appl e Blossom, Primroses, and Bird’s Nest Mrs. Platt
D. G. ROSSETTI
1/38 The Borgia Family W. Coltart, Esq.
P. DE WINT
1739 River Scene J- Orrcck, Esq.
WILLIAM HUNT
1740 Reading the “League” Thomas Johnson, Esq.
DAVID COX
1741 Cows IN A River Peter Allen, Esq.
W. W. DEANE
1742 Interior of Seville Cathedral Mrs. Deane
COPLEY FIELDING
1743 The Snowdon Range Abraham Haworth, Esq.
SIR A. W. CALLCOTT, R.A.
1744 i On the Medway C. E. Lees, Esq.
\
GALLERY No. 13,
DAVID ROBERTS, R.A,
W. 11. Ilouldsvjorth, 7iVy., M.P
Baalbec,
W. HULL
Village Street Scene
S. PROUT
Fishmarket at Rome
A. ELMORE, R.A.
Lucrezia Borgia
WILLIAM HUNT.
Rustics in a Barn
Lilacs and Bird’s Nest
C. STANFIELD, R.A,
Barnbougle Castle, on the Forth
WILLIAM HUNT
The Wanderer
Primroses
T. R. Wilkinson^ Esq.
Mrs. BotsforJj
James Taylor.,
.. D. Thivaites
Thomas Ashton.
J. Or rock
J. Orrock
JOHN SELL COTMAN
Via Mala
WILLIAM HUNT
R. Peacock, Esq., M.P.
G. W. Moss, Esq.
Bird’s Nest and May Blossom
Peach, Plum, and Grapes
S. PROUT
Venice
WILLIAM HUNT
... F, Craven, Esq.
Abel Buckley, Esq.
Devotion
Roses ...
DAVID COX
Plumstead Marsh
James Worrall, jim.. Esq.
C. STANFIELD, R.A.
Ischia
SAMUEL PALMER
Harvest Field
J. M. W. TURNER, R.A,
Land’s End
Llangollen
Bridge over the Moselle
The Righi
Swiss Pass —Effect of Storm
Whitehaven
The Righi
St. Michael’s Mount
Lucerne
F. Craven, Esq.
C. F. PI. Bolckow, Esq.
C. E. Lees, Lsq.
■ J. E. Taylor, Plsq.
— Jesse Haworth, Esq.
... Walter Dunlop, Esq.
J. E. Taylor, Esq.
...R. Leake, Esq., M.P.
ibraham Haworth, Esq.
GALLERY No. 13.
J. M. W. TURNER, l^.A.—contimied.
Chain Bridge over the Tees Abraham Haworth^ Esq.
(Engraved in Whittaker’s “History of Richmondshire.”)
The Righi TL. G. Cassells, Esq.
Warwick Castle Abraham Haworth, Esq.
Lake of Lucerne J. J/. lletherington. Esq.
The Rhine above Schaffhausen C. E. Lees, Esq.
Temple of Minerva, Cape Colonna A. Eilkington, Esq.
Lowestoft Rev. C. J. Sale
(Engraved in the “England and Wales” series.)
DAVID ROBERTS, R.A.
Salamanca E. Atkinson, Esq.
D. G. ROSSETTI.
Dante Meeting Beatrice Dr. Lloyd Roberts
DAVID COX.
Warwick Castle W. U. Ilouldsworth, Esq., M.P.
FREDERICK 'WALKER, A.R.A.
Bee-hives Mrs. W. A. Turner
The Well William Agnew, Esq.
The Harbour of Refuge (sketch) William Agnew, Esq.
Portrait of the Artist J. G. Marks, Esq.
Lilies Mrs. Graham
G. BARRET
Sunset A. Akacmorran, Esq.
Timber Waggon J. Orrock, Esq.
FREDERICK WALKER, A.R.A.
Our Village Mrs. Graeme Ogilvie
Mushrooms Humphrey Roberts, Esq.
D. G. ROSSETTI
Hesterna Rosa F. Craven, Esq.
“ Quoth tongue of neither maid nor wife,
To heart of neither wife nor maid.
Lead we not here a jolly life
Betwixt the shine and shade ? ”
“ Quoth heart of neither maid nor wife,
To tongue of neither wife nor maid,
Thou waggs’t, but I am worn with strife.
And feel like flowers that fade .” — Henry Taylor.
FREDERICK WALKER, A.R.A.
The New Boy David Jardine, Esq.
The Chaplain’s Daughter ’. Birket Foster, Esq.
WILLIAM HUNT
Bird’s Nest and Appi.e Blossom Adam Dugdale, Esq,
W. HULL
The Village Inn T. R. Wilkinson, Esq.
FINE ARTS SECTION
ARCHITECTURAL DRAWINGS
Salford Baths (Interior)
The Architect
J. D. MOULD
The Architect
Chapel at Clitheroe
SIR G. GILBERT SCOTT, RA., cl.
St. George’s Church, Doncaster J. Oldred Scott, Esq.
DECIMUS BURTON, d.
Cog HURST 2Iiss Wooa
J. D. MOULD
The Architect
The Architect
Chapel at Little Hulton
Chapel at Edenfield
The Manchester Board of Guardians
Industrial Schools, Swinton
DECIMUS BURTON, d.
Charing Cross Hospital
United Service Club...,
J. D. MOULD
Chapel at Swinton
The Architect
SIR G. GILBERT SCOTT, R,A., d.
Houses, Broad Sanctuary, Westminstkr
PROFESSOR C. R. COCKERELL, d.
St. George’s Hall, Liverpool ; Tympanum
Mrs. Cocker ell
368 ARCHITECTURAL DRAWINGS.
SMITH, WOODHOUSE, and WILLOUGHBY
1808 Stephenson Memorial Hall, Chesterfield 21ie Architects
1809 Doctor’s House, Urmston The Architects
WEIGHTMAN, HADFIELD, and GOLDIE, d.
1810 Boreatton Park, Salop C. Iladfield, Esq.
1811 St. John’s, Salford, and St. Chad’s, Manchester... C. Hadjield, Esq.
SYDNEY SMIRKE, R.A. d.
1812 Carlton Club Sydney Smirke^ Esq.
1813 Royal Academy Sydney Smirke, Esq.
1814 Pavilion for Prince xVlbert Sydney Sinirke^ Esq.
GOLDSMITH and SON
1815 Scottish Provident Buildings The Architects
1816 Houses, Victoria Park, Manchester The Architects
HADFIELD and SON
1817 Corn Exchange Buildings, Ac., Sheffield C. Hadheld, Esq.
B. FERREY, d.
1818 Wynnstay, N. Wales B. E. Ferrey^ Esq.
1819 St. Stephen’s Church AND Schools, Westminster ... B. E. Ferrey, E>‘q.
‘ WEIGHTMAN and HADFIELD d.
1820 Marie’s, Mulberry Street, Manchester C. Hadjield, Esq.
GOLDSMITH and SON
1821 House at Bowdon 'The Architects.
HADFIELD and SON
1822 Great Northern Hotel, Leeds C. Hadjield, Esq.
SIR CHARLES BARRY, RA-, d.
1823 New Palace, Westminster (River Front)
Ejcors. of the late E. M. Barry, Esq.
REDFERN and SAWDAY
1824 Poor Law Qffices, Leicester The Architects
HADFIELD and SON
1825 Convent Church, Sisters of Notke Dame C. Hadjield, Esq.
i SIR M, DIGBY WYATT, d. .
1826 i’osT Office, Calcutta (Interior of Hall) Lady Wyatt
1827 Post Office, Calcutta (Exterior) Lady Wyatt
SIR CHARLES BARRY, R.A., d.
1828 New Palace, Westminster (Land Front as designed.
Approach to Westminster Bridge) C. Barry, Esq.
GRAYSON and OULD
Mersey Railway — Hamilton Square Station The Architects
[
ARCHITECTURAL DRAWINGS,
SIR CHARLES BARRY, R.A., d.
Halifax Town Hall Executors of the late E. M. Barry ^ Esq.
New Palace, Westminster, New Palace Yard (as designed).
C. Barry^ Esq.
GRAYSON and OULD
Bradfield Rectory, Reading The Architects
Offices, Castle Street, Liverpool The Architects
EDWARD WALTERS, d.
Free Trade Hall, Manchester Messrs. Barker and Ellis
Group of Manchester Warehouses Messrs. Barker and Ellis
TRAVIS and MANGNALL, d.
Watts’s Warehouse, Manchester ... Messrs. Mangnall dc Littlewoods
GRAYSON and OULD
WooLTON Church, Liverpool The Architects
House at Chester The Architects
Mersey Railway — James Street Station The Architects
E. M. BARRY, R.A., d.
Wykehurst, Sussex Exors. of late E. M. Barry ^ Esq.
G. E. STREET, R.A., d.
North-West Porch, Bristol Cathedral A. E. Street^ Esq.
New Law Courts designed for the Thames Embankment
A. E. Street^ Esq.
W. H. THORP
Quarrydene, Westwood, Leeds The Architect
J. DOBSON, d
Billiard Room, Beaufront Castle Miss Dobson
E. M. BARRY. R A., d.
City Terminus and Hotel, Cannon Street, London... C. Lucas, Esq.
a P. HAYWARD
Duke of Cornwall Hotel, Plymouth The Architect
MANGNALL and LITTLBWOODS
Fish Market Extension, Manchester The Architects
ISAAC HOLDEN and SON
Cathedral at Lille (design for) The Architects
C. P. HAYWARD
Thames Embankment Scheme The Architect
WALTER MILLARD
Cottages, Ardsley, Herts
The Architect
» 5 ^^
a^TKOTfl
370
1851
1852
1853
1854
1855
1856
1857
1858
1859
1860
1861
1862
1863
1864
1865
1866
1867
1868
1869
1870
ARCHITECTURAL DRAWINGS.
J. W. and R. P. BEAUMONT
Nutfield, Reigate, Surrey
The Architects
CHARLES HEATHCOTE
Batus, Salford The Architect
SPEAKMAN and CHARLESWORTH, d.
Town Hall, Manchester (Competition Design)
The Committee of the Clarendon Cluh
C. P. HAYWARD
Natural Science Schools, Harrow — Entrance The Architect
Ditto ditto ditto Garden View ... The Architect
CHARLES HEATHCOTE
Commercial Union Insurance Offices The Architect
P. C. EDWARDS
CHkPEL, Poulton-le-Fylde Cemetery The Architect
CHARLES BARRY
Dulwich College Oreat Hall The Architect
Ditto Exterior The Architect
P. C. EDWARDS
House at Knutsford The Architect
J. NIXON HORSEPIBLD
Claremont, Bournemouth llie Architect
CHARLES BARRY
Burlington House, Nem' ; Piccadilly The Architect
Dulm’icii College (6 Sketches, Portions) The Architect
GEORGE CORSON
Foxhill Mansion, Leeds The Architect
CHARLES BARRY .
lloiTAL Exchange, London, Roof to Quadrangle The Architect
GEORGE CORSON
Board Schools, Pately Bridge The Architect
CHARLES BARRY
Clumber House, the Residence of the Duke of Newcastle
(as restored) The Architect
GEORGE CORSON
AVarehouse, Bradford The Architect
HORTON and BRIDGPORD
Gothic Villa, Bowdon The Architects
CHARLES BARRY
Clumber House, the Great Hall The Architect
sti
ARCHITECTURAL DRAWINGS.
371
I DAVID BRANDON
1871 I Bayham Abbey, Sussex The Architect
I MANGNALL and LITTLBWOODS
1872 Presbyterian Church, Salford The Architects
I MBDLAND TAYLOR
1873 i St. John’s, Stand Lane The Architect
I
i MANGNALL and LITTLBWOODS
1874 ^ Penrith Church, Cumberland The Architects
\ DAVID BRANDON
1875 SiDBURY Manor, Devon The Architect
GBORGB CORSON
C. F. HAYWARD
1877 ! CopsEHiLL, Gloucestershire The Architect
' G-EOEGB CORSON
1878 1 Grand Theatre, Leeds The Architect
1 BDWARD SALOMONS
1879 Art Treasures Exhibition, 1857 (Picture Gallery) The Architect
1880 I Art Treasures Exhibition (Interior of Great Hall)... The Architect
PISHBR and HBPPBR
1881 Ganton Hall The Architects
i W. H. CROSSLAND
1882 ; Royal Holloway College, Egham, Water Tower The Architect
1883 ' Town Hall, Rochdale, Staircase The Architect
' HORTON and BRIDGFORD
39, Piccadilly, Manchester The Architects
W. H. CROSSLAND
Holloway San.atorium, Recreation Hall and Tower . . . The Architect
1886 i i'oAVN Hall, Rochdale The Architect
OCTAVIUS HANSARD
1887 Garbridge, Appleby The Architect
1888 Marshall and Snelgrove’s Premises, Oxford Street, London,
The Architect
W. H. CROSSLAND
Copley Church (Interior) The Architect
FISHER and HBPPBR
Ganton Hall The Architects
J. OLDRED SCOTT
Slough Church, Bucks (Interior) The Architect
1892
1893
1894
1895
1898
1899
1900
ARCHITECTURAL DRAWINGS.
MEDLAND TAYLOR
St. James’s, Buxton The Architect
St. Luke’s, Halliwell The Architect
J. OLDRID SCOTT
Cathedral, Falkland Islands The Architect
Lahore Cathedral The Architect
GOLDIE, CHILD, and GOLDIE,
Church of thr Sacked Heart, Hall Lane, Liverpool The Architects
J. OLDRID SCOTT
St. Augustine’s Church, Croydon The Architect
GOLDIE, CHILD, and GOLDIE
Church of St. James, Spanish Place, London The Architects
St. James’s, Spanish Place (Interior) The Architects
J. OLDRID SCOTT
Church, West Ham, Essex The Architect
GOLDIE, CHILD, and GOLDIE
Church of St. Peter, Phibsborough, Dublin The Architects
Residence, S.J., Farm Street, W The Architects
HORTON and BRIDGFORD
Baths, Southport I'he Architects
GEORGE TRUEFITT
St. George’s, Tufnell Park, Tower and Spire The Architect
W. H. THORP
St. James’s Hall, Leeds (New Wing) The Architect
SMITH, WOODHOUSE, and WILLOUGHBY
Houses, Heaton Chapel The Architects
JOHN P. SEDDON
Aberystwitii College before the Fire The Architect
GEORGE TRUEFITT
Brooks’s Bank, Manchester The Architect
J. LANGHAM
A Doctor’s House, Swhnton The Architect
ARTHUR EDMUND STREET
St. Paul’s Church, Worcester The Architect
T. HEYGATE VERNON
Whittlebury, Northamptonshire The Architect
MEDLAND TAYLOR
Blair Hospital, Bolton The Architect
If ^ — — — “■■ _ _
ARCHITECTURAL DRAWINGS.
373
1913
WILLIAM DOUBLEDAY
CoBDEN Coffee House
The Architect
1
1914 ;
T. HEYGATE VERNON
Crewe Green Schools, Cheshire
The Architect
1915 i
1916 ;
LAWRENCE BOOTH
Public Baths at Oldham
Salford Union Hospital
The Architect
The Architect
i
1917
ARCHIBALD MACPHERSON
St. Aloysius College, Garnett Hill, Glasgow
The Architect
1
1918
LAWRENCE BOOTH
Headquarters, Drill Hall 2nd Manchester, R.V. ...
The Architect
1
1
1919
CHORLEY and CONNON
Examples of Modern, Domestic, Ecclesiastic,
Commercial Buildings
AND
The Architects
1920
THOMAS E. COLLCUTT
Wakefield Town Hall, Council Chamber
The Architect
1921
WILLIAM DOUBLEDAY
Congregational Chapel, Heath Town, Wolverhampton 2^ke Architect
1922 '
1923 ,
THOMAS E. COLLCUTT
Premises, Oxford-street, London
House at Hayes, Kent
The Architect
. The Architect
1
1
1924
WILLIAM DOUBLBDAY
Staffordshire Bank
, The Architect
1
1925
1926
G. AITCHESON
Staircase, I, Grosvenor Crescent
Dining-room, 52, Prince’s Gate
. The Architect
. The Architect
1927
GOLDSMITH and SON
Houses, Cheadle Hulme
The Architects
1928
LAWRENCE BOOTH
Warehouse, Piccadilly, Manchester
. The Architect
1929
G. AITCHESON
Office, 29, Pall Mall
. The Architect
1930
A H. DAVIES-COLLEY
Hulme Grammar School, Manchester
, The Architect
1931
LAWRENCE BOOTH
Bank, Bury Banking Co
. The Architect
1932
JOHN BROOKE
Newstead, Dunham Massey
. The Architect
! i
JESSE HORSFALL
1933 Houses, Harley Wood, Todmorden The Architect
' JOHN BROOKE
1934 : Newhall Manor, Surrey The Architect
GOLDSMITH and SON
1935 Congregational Church, Chorlton The Architects
i EDWARD and FRANK HEWITT
1936 ^ Gamston Kectory, Notts The Architects
I FISHER and HEPPER
1937 , Holy Trinity, Micklegate, York (Restoration and
Enlargement) The Architects
W. MANGNALL, d.
1938 ! Masonic Hall, Manchester Messrs. Mangnall and Littleivoods
j MEDLAND TAYLOR
1939 ; Bacup Parish Church The xirchitect
CHARLES HADFIELD
1940 Shops and Chambers, Sheffield The Architect
THOMAS D. BARRY and SONS
1941 I New Sessions and Police Courts, Birkenhead The Architects
1942 Fisk Memorial Church, Malvern The Architects
1943 St. Cuthbert’s, Everton, Liverpool The Architects
1944 St. Nicholas, Blundellsanus, Liverpool The Architects
1945 Tulse Hill Church, Norwood The xirchitects
JESSE HORSFALL
1916 Fielden Coffee Tavern, Todmorden The Architect
I B. EDMUND FERRY
1947 Holy Trinity Church, Hornsey The Architect
JOHN P. SEDDON
1948 1 St. James’s, Great Yarmouth (Interior) The xirchitect
I HORTON and BRIDGFORD
1949 I 122, Market Street, Manchester The Architects
I HIPPOLYTB J. BLANC
1950 Coats’ Memorial Church, Paisley ...’ The xirchitect
1951 St. James’ Church, Paisley The xirchitects
HORTON and BRIDGFORD
1952 108, Market Street, Manchester The xirchitects
1953 Brick Architecture Board Schools Idie Architects
1954 I Villa, Bowdon, Cheshire The xirchitects
ARCHTTECTURAL DRAWINGS.
1960
j BASIL CHAMPNBYS
1955 : Butler Museum and Classrooms, Harrow The Architect
1956 I Divinity Schools, Cambridge The Architect
1957 I Indian Institute, Oxford The Architect
1958 I Indian Institute, Oxford The Architect
1959 I Boys’ School, Bedford •. The Architect
THOMAS NEWBY
Welcombe, Stratford-on-Avon (for Mark Philips, Esq.) The Architect
BASIL CHAMPNEYS
1961 Girls’ School, Bedford The Architect
HENRY LORD
I
1962 ' Marlborough Road Board School, Salford The Architect
1963 ! St. George’s Church and Parsonage, Oldham Road,
I
! Manchester The Architect
I
j PALEY and AUSTIN
1964 Royal Albert Asylum, Lancaster The Architects
THOMAS HOWDTLL
Schools and Proposed Chapel, Primitive Methodist,
Burley Road, Leeds The Architect
\ WOODHOUSE and MORLEY
1 966 ^ Mill for Messrs. L. & P. Coats, Paisley The Architects
* J. M. BRYDON
1967 : Vestry Hall, Chelsea The Architect
I W. SUGDEN and SON
1968 Manchester and Liverpool District Bank, Leek The Architects
I WOODHOUSE and MORLEY
1969 ; Schools for Half-timers at Leek The Architects
1965
J. M. BRYDON
1970 j St. Peter’s Hospital, C'ovent Garden The Architect
I ’ PUGIN and PUGIN
1971 High Altar, Franciscan Church, Gorton The Architects
\ W. SUGDEN and SON
1972 ! Wyndyate, Scarbro’ The Architects
PALEY and AUSTIN
1973 Atherton Church, Lancashire The Architects
HENRY LORD
1974 Trafford Road Board School, Salford The Architect
1975 Central Board Schools The Architect
‘-^.(CiibHrrrrii
' 4 ^. St
376
n
ARCHITECTURAL DRAWINIJS.
W. SUGDEN and SON
1976 ' Tabernacle Church Buildings, Hanley The Architects
HENRY LORD
1977 i Ordsall Board School, Salford The Architect
W. SUGDEN and SON
1978 Nicholson Institute, L^ek The Architects
1979 ; Secular Hall, Leicester The Architects
f ’
I F. H. OLDHAM
I 1980 House, Windermere The Architect
1981 ■ Municipal Buildings, Nottingham (Premiated Design) The Architect
i G. D. OLIVER
1982 Residence, Chatsworth Square, Carlisle The Architect
I JAMES STEVENS
1983 Town Hall, Macclesfield
ROYLE and BENNETT
1984 I Business Premises, Deansgate
Board School, Strangeways
JAMES STEVENS
1985
1986
1987
1988
Market Hall, Wrexham
The Architect
The Architects
The Architects
The Architect
The Architects
ROYLE and BENNETT
Board School, Upper Jackson Street, Hulme
JAMES STEVENS
Market Hall, Warrington The Architect
1989 Parish Church of St. Michael’s, Macclesfield The Architect
\ P. H. OLDHAM
1990 j Warehouse, Blackfriars Street, Manchester The Architect
' JAMES STEVENS
1991 ; Parish Church, Macclesfield The Architect
1992 I Parish Church, Macclesfield The Architect
I MANGNALL and LITTLEWOODS
1993 I Victoria Buildings (Design for) The Architects
^ I THOMAS WORTHINGTON
j 1994 Town Hall, Manchester (Design for) The Architect
I JAMES STEVENS
1995 Infirmary, Macclesfield The Architect
MANGNAIiL and LITTLEWOODS
1996 , Presbyterian Church, Whalley Range
The Architects
ARCHITECTURAL DRAWINGS.
377
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
THOMAS WORTHINGTON
Town Hall, Manchester (Design for) Tkt Architect
Town Hall, Manchester (Design for) The Architect
Prince Consort Memorial, Manchester The Architect
Mansion at Didsbury The Architect
Nicholls Hospital, Manchester The Architect
Police and Sessions Courts, Manchester The Architect
Monton Church, near Manchester The Architect
T. G. JACKSON
House, 2, Kensington Court The Architect
The Schools, Oxford Quadrangle The Architect
Brighton College, Gateway Tower, & Boarding Houses . . . The Architect
JAMES BROOKS
St. Andrew’s, Willesden Green (N.E. View) The Architect
R. KNILL FREEMAN
British Chapel, Moscow The Architect
ALFRED WATERHOUSE, R.A.
xA-ssize Courts, Manchester The Architect
T. G. JACKSON
The Schools, Oxford, with Building for Non-Collegiate
Students The Architect
R. KNILL FREEMAN
Bryerswood, Windermere '. The Architect
I ALFRED WATERHOUSE, R.A.
Central Technical Institution, Kensington The Architect
R. KNILL FREEMAN
St. Peter’s, Farnworth The Architect
ALFRED WATERHOUSE, R.A.
Eaton, near Chester The Duke of Westminster
; Staircase, Owens College The Architect
\ Owens College, Manchester The A rchitect
JAMES BROOKS
i St. Andrew’s, Plaistow (S.E. View) The Architect
\ ALFRED WATERHOUSE, R A-
National Liberal Club, Thames Embankment The Architect
JAMES BROOKS
Church of Transfiguration, Lewisham (N.E. View) ... The Architect
^ St. John Baptist, Kensington (Interior East) The Architect
31
1
378
ARCHITECTURAL DRAWINGS.
2021
ALFRED WATERHOUSE, R.A.
Natural History Museum’, South Kensington
Tht Architect
2022
HENRY LORD
Manchester and Salford Rank, Salford
The Architect
2023
2024
JAMES BROOKS
St. Mary, "Wooiavich (S.E, View)
St. Peter’s, St. Leon ard’s-on-Sea (S.E. View)
The Architect
The Architect
2025
2026
2027
SIR HORACE JONES
Tower Bascule Bridge
Tower Bascule Bridge
Three London Markets — Meat, Poultry, Fish
The Architect
The Architect
The Architect
2028
R. KNILL FREEMAN
Bolton Infirmary
The Architect
.
2029
2030
J. W. and R. F. BEAUMONT
Sir Ralph Pendlebury Memorial Buldings, Stockport
Ducie Avenue Board Schools, Manchester
The Architects
The Architects
2031
2032
2033
R. KNILL FREEMAN
St. Augustine’s, Tonge Moor
South Shore Church, Blackpool
St. Mark’s, AVorsley
The Architect
The Architect
The A rchitect
2034
HENRY ROSS
St. Peter’s Church, Accrington
The'Architect
2035
1 MILLS and MURGATROYD
Royal Exchange, Manchester (Exterior)
The Architects
2036
BARKER and ELLIS
“ Manchester Guardian ” Offices
The Architects
2037
1 MILLS and MURGATROYD
Grammar School, Manchester (Extension)
The Architects
2038
; J. W. and R. F. BEAUMONT
' Town Hall, Hyde
The Architects
2039
! MILLS and MURGATROYD
' Royal Exchange, Manchester (Interior)
The Architects
2040
HENRY ROSS
St. Peter’s Accrington (Interior)
. The Architect
2041
' J. B. FRASER
Redmile Station (Interior)
. The Architect
2042
MEE and STEINTHAL
1 St. James’s, Manchester
The Architects
ARCHITECTli RAL DRAWINGS.
379
2043
•
2044
2015
2046
2047
2048
2049
2050
2051
2052
2053
2054
2055
2056
2057
2058
2059
2060
2061
2062
2063
2064
2065
SMITH. WOODHOUSE, and WILLOUGHBY
Shops, Wolverhampton The Architects
\ J. B. FRASER
Redmile Station (Exterior) The Architect
' WORTHINGTON and ELGOOD
1 Glasgow Town Hall (Premiated Design) The Architects
J. B. FRASER
St. Augustine's, Leeds (Interior) The Architect
G. D. OLIVER
Grammar School, Carlisle The Architect
PERKIN and BULMER
Offices, &c., York The Architects
W. EMERSON
St. Mary’s, Brighton The Architeci
x\ll Saints’, Cannington, Allahabad The Architect
Muir College, Quadrangle The Architect
Muir College, Allahabad The Architect
WILLIAM YOUNG
Holmewood House, Hunts The Architect
PERKIN and BULMER
Cottages, Whitby The Architects
W. EMERSON
Takhtsingji Hospital, Bhavnagar, India The Architect
St. Mary’s, Brighton (Interior) .’ The Architect
GOLDSMITH and SON
Northorpe Hall The Architects
MAXWELL and TUKE
Southport Winter Gardens The Architects
WILLIAM YOUNG
Municipal Buildings, Glasgow The Architect
PENNINGTON and BRIDGEN
Inland Revenue Offices, Manchester The Architects
He AN Castle, Tenby The Architects
Royal Eye Hospital, Manchester The Architects
MEE and STEINTHAL
I Artists’ Homes, Hampstead The Architects
I WILLIAM YOUNG
I Municipal Buildings, Glasgow The Architect
I PENNINGTON and BRIDGEN
I Queen’s Buildings, John Dalton Street The Architects
Lancaster Road.
Ditto, View from Church Street
Ditto, View from Market Square.
MAXWELL and TUKB
Birmingham Assize Courts (Design for) The Architects
H. B. SANG
Mantelpiece and Side Wall, Stratheden House, Hyde
Park (for M. Henry, Esq.) The Architect
Conservatory Arcade, Bylaugh Park, Norfolk (for
H. Evans Lombe, Esq.) The Architect
MAXWELL and TUKE.
Jubilee Exhibition, Manchester (Exterior) The Architects
Ditto ditto (Interior) The Architects
W. H. BRAKSPEAR
Parish Church, Bowdon The Architect
Ditto ditto The Architect
Exchange, Blackburn The Architect
H. B. BARE
Drawing-room Decoration The Architect
Dining-room Decoration The Architect
Decorated Shop Front, in Glazed Terra Cotta The Architect
W. H. BRAKSPEAR
Bridgewater Church Restored The Architect
Wesleyan Chapel, Bowdon The Architect
Ditto ditto The Architect
I
k
GEORGE TINWORTH
2089 The Release of Barabbas (a panel in terra cotta) Boulton <£•
In tills panel Pilate, who occupies the centre of the piece, is pro-
nouncing sentence on our Lord, who is delivered to be crucified, and is
being led away bound by the soldiers in attendance. Directly behind the
Saviour, the Virgin Mary, and the Apostle John appear as spectators,
together with some of their friends, A Roman officer is speaking to
I another spectator on the left of St. John, and on the extreme right
the Apostle Peter, in an agony of remorse, is restrained from approaching
the Lord by another soldier. On the right and left of Pilate are
attendants holding the water and towel that he may wash his hands,
and so disown comjJicity in the guilt of what he has done, while
Pilate’s wife, with a Roman companion, stands behind. On the
left, Barabbas is released, amid the congratulations of the bystanders ;
and persons of various nationalities appear behind. To the left is a
Roman watchman, denoted by the bells upon his dress ; and a
negro is attempting to speak to Barabbas, and is addressing a
soldier with a view to obtaining the desired interview. The place
of the trial is set forth by the architectural embellishments in the
background, and a broken vessel and a fallen capital in front are
introduced as symbolising the decay of the old dispensation. A palm
branch is lying on the ground, recalling to memory the recent triumphal
entry of the Lord into Jerusalem. The texts to which reference is
made are the following
“ For of a truth, against thy holy child Jesus, whom thou hast anointed,
both Herod and Pontius Pilate with the Gentiles and the people of Israel were
gathered together, for to do whatsoever thy hand and thy counsel determined
before to be done.” (Actsiv., 27. 28.)
“ But as for you, ye thought evil against me, but God meant it unto good,
to bring to pass, as it is this day, to save much people alive.” (Gen. xlv., 5.)
When Pilate saw that he could prevail nothing, but that rather a tumult
was made, he took water, and washed his hands before the multitude, saying, I
am innocent of the blood of this just person : see ye to it.” (Matt, xxvii., 24.)
“ When their judges are overthrown in stony places, they shall hear my
words, for they are sweet.” (Psalm cxli., 6.)
“For if I make you sorry, who is he that maketh me glad, but the same
which is made sorry by me?” (2 Cor. ii., 2.)
“Tliough a sinner do evil an hundred times, and his days be prolonged,
yet surely I know that it shall be well with them that fear God, which
fear before him ; but it shall not be well with the wicked, neither shall he
prolong his days, which are as a shadow ; because he feareth not before God ”
(Eccles. viii., 12, 13.)
382
SCULPTURE.
2090
2091
2092
2093
2094
2095
2096
2097
2098
T. BROOK, R.A.
A Moment of Peril (bronze equestrian group) Purchased hy the
President and Council of the Royal Academy^ under the terms of
the Chantrey Bequest, and. lent hy (hem.
IN THE MAIN AVENUE.
S. ONSLOW FORD
The Right Hon. W. E. Gladstone, M.P The Artist
COUNT GLEICHBN
Marquis of Abergavenny (life size) The Artist
Hero (life size) Ditto
The Right Hon. Earl of P)Eaconsfield (life size) Ditto
Scotch Fisher woman (life size) Ditto
B. ROSCOB MULLINS
Bless Me, even Me also. Father The Artist
Autolycus (marble) Ditto
H. CALDBR MARSHALL, R.A.
Stepping Stones (bronze) The Artist
f
COMPLIMENTAPtY LIST.
PAGE
Adamson, Daniel & Co., Diikinfield, near iManchester 29
Arkwright, Sir Richard A Co., Cromford, near Derby 29
Armitage, G. F., Altrincham 29
Ashton, John & Son, Manchester 30
Atkinson, Mrs. Asheton, Altrincham 29
Bailey, "W. H. A Co., Salford, Manchester 30
Batty, M’illiam A Son, Manchester 30
Cardinal A Harford, London 30
Chubb A Sons, Manchester and London 31
Clarke, John T., Manchester 32
Clegg’, Neville, Altrincham 32
Coalbrookdale Co., Limited 32
Committee of Section No. 1 (The) 32
Cowlishaw, Nicol, A Co., Manchester 32
Craven Bros., Limited, Manchester 33
Decauville Aine, London, and Petit Bourg, France 33
Doulton A Co., London and Manchester 33
Dickson and Robinson, Manchester. 34
Dickson, Isaac, A Co., Liverpool 34
Dickson, Brown, and Tait, Manchester 34
Elgood Brothers, Leicester 34
Falkner, Geo. A Son, Manchester 34
Follows and Bate, Limited, Manchester 34
Frictionless Engine Packing Co., Manchester 34
Government School of Art (The), Macclesfield 34
Galloway, Mb A J. A Sons, Manchester 34
Haworth, Jesse, Woodside, Bowdoii 35
Hick, Hargreaves, A Co., Bolton, Lancashire 36
Hey wood, John, Manchester 36
Lancashire and Cheshire Telephonic Exchange Co., Limited (The),
Manchester 37
Leroy, F. A Co., Manchester 37
PA6E.
Leveson & Sons, Manchester 37
Lowe, Roger L., Bolton 37
Lyons, H. and J., Manchester 37
Morris, John & Sons, Salford 37
Mather and Platt, Salford Iron Works, Manchester 38
Moseley, David & Sons, Ardwick, Manchester 38
Musgrave, John A Sons, Limited, Bolton, Lancashire 38
Nevill, C. H., Bramhall HaU 38
Osier, F. and C., Birmingham 38
O’Connor, Patrick, Wavertree, near Liverpool 39
Perkins, Son, and Barrett, Bradford 39
Pearn, Frank Co., Manchester 39
Preston, The Misses C. and J., Manchester 39
Rose, William & Co., Manchester 39
Shrigley and Hunt, Lancaster 39
Singer & Sons, Somerset 40
Sykes, Richard, Stockport 40
Slack and Brownlow, Manchester 40
Thomas, Henry, Manchester 40
Thomas, Thos. & Sons, Cardiff 40
Whitehead, Henry, Bury 40
Wrigley, James & Son, Limited, Bury, Lancashire 40
Patent Waterproof Paper and Canvas Co., London, N.W 40
r
GENERAL EXHIBITS,
STAND
799
PAGE
177
Abram Coal Co., Wigan
Adamson, Daniel & Co., Diikinfield, near Manchester
Adams, Robert, London
Esthetic Asphalte Co. (The)
Aine, Bourgeois, Paris
Albion Iron Works Co., Riigeley, Staffordshire
Alexander, James & Co., London
Allen, William, Manchester 367, 717 ..
Allen Machine Co., Limited (The), Halifax, England 450 a..,
Ambler, John, Manchester
Ancoats Vale Rubber Co., Limited (The), Manchester 890 ..
Andrew, John Henry, and Co., Sheffield 623 ..
Andrew, J. E. H. & Co., Limited, Reddish, near S ockport ... 478 ..
Anglo-American Tin Stamping Co., Limited ('fhe), Worcester 97 ..
Anglo-American Bmsh Electric Light Corporation, . Limited,
London 402 ..
Annan and Swan, London, E.C
Anti-Friction Conveyor Co., (The), London 502 ..,
Anyon’s Patent Macrame Lace Loom Co., Chorlton-on-Medlock 60 ..
Archer, Charles Topham, London 606 ..
Armstrong, Thos. & Bro., Manchester 30 ..,
Armitage, John & Son, Manchester 112 ...
Armitage, George Faulkner, Altrincham 219 ...
Ashton, W. T. & Son, Miles Platting, Manchester 4 ...
Ashton, John and Son, Manchester 557 ...
Ashbury Railway Carriage and Iron Co., Limited (The), Open-
shaw, Manchester 631 ...
Ashbury Railway Carriage and Iron Co. (The), Openshaw,
Manchester 634 ...
Ashworth, Edmund & Sons, Bolton 775 ...
Askham Bros, and Wilson, Limited, Sheffield 632 ...
Association of Carlsbad Glass Manufacturers, Carlsbad, Bohemia 201 . . .
Aa
386
INDEX— GENERAL EXHIBITS.
bXAND
PAGE
Astbury & Co., Manchester
Astley and Tyldesley Coal and Salt Co.,
Tyldesley
Autotype Co., London
Avery, William & Son, Redd itch
Limited (The)
649 ... 151
813
1137
B
Babcock and Wilson Co. (The), Glasgow 665 .
Bacon, John & Co., Manchester 184 .
Badden, William & Son, Oldham 350 a.
Bagley, Francis, Coventry 328 .
Bagley and Wright, Oldham 774 .
Bagnall & Co., Manchester 853 ,
Bailey, W. H. & Co., Salford 667 ,
Bailey, W. H. & Co., Salford 701
Bailey, W. H. & Co., Salford 357
Bailey, W. H. A Co., Salford 392
Bailey, W. H. Co., Salford 575
Bailey, W. H. & Co., Salford 520
Bailey and Williamson, Manchester 1127
Bailey, W. H. & Co., Salford 1119
Baker, Charles L. & Co. Manchester 604
Baker, George, Sevastopoulo, Khan, Constantinople 249
Baker, Joseph & Sons, London 663
Bapty, Samuel Lee, F.R.G.S., Brockley, Kent
Barker & Co., Limited, Stockport 7
Barlow, H. B. A Co., Manchester 596
Barlow, Samuel A Co., Limited, Manchester 783
Barlow A Jones Limited, Manchester 37
Barningham A Co., Limited, Manchester 554
Baron and Hogarth, Kendal 532
Barstow, Jacob, Pontefract 931
Barton, James A Co., Manchester 156, 1162
Barton, James A Co., Manchester 162
Bashall, William, A Co., Preston 8
Bates, Arthur, Manchester 408
Bauer e Antonibere, Piazza Frescobaldi, Florence, and Nove
Provincia, Venezia 264
179
198
215
154
66
91
86
173
184
154
161
92
100
136
128
214
213
143
77
153
198
44
141
175
47
132
130
195
63
63
44
, 103
, 80
1 INDEX— GENERAL EXHIBITS.
387
1
STAND PAGE
1 Biiyree and Son, Burnley
61 ... 50
1 Beckett, William, Heywood, near Manchester
9.50 ... 197
1 Bedford Lemere & Co., London
... 198
1 Bedford, AVilliam, London, N
... 198
1 Bell Brothers, Limited, Middlesbrough
822 ... 180
1 Belt, Annie, West Hartlepool
1139 ... 215
1 Bengal Silk Co. Limited, Calcutta
313 ... 84
1 Bennett, J. M. and Sons, Manchester
145 ... 61
1 Bennett, Reuben, Manchester
230 ... 75
1 Benton & Johnson, London
286 ... 83
1 Bentley & Ford, Longton, Staffordshire
418 ... 105
1 Bentley and Jackson, Bury, near Manchester
516 ... 127
1 Bergue, De & Co., Limited, Manchester
391 ... 100
1 Berkeley, H. B. and Willis, Wm., London
... 198
1 Berry, L., Chorley, Lancashire
... 199
1 Beyer, Peacock & Co., Manchester
637 ... 149
' 1 Bierfreund, Lor., Odense, Denmark
25 ... 46
i 1 Billcliff, Joshua, Manchester
... 199
i 1 Bilsland & Co., Edinburgh
887 ... 188
j 1 Binns. Brothers, Manchester
277a... 82
j 1 Bindley, Thomas R. B. & Son, Smithwick
877 ... 187
n 1 Birch, William, Manchester
427 ... 106
i 1 Birch, G. &; Co., Salford •
570 ... 135
s 1 Blackman Air Propeller Ventilating Co., Limited, London
506 ... 125
\ 1 Blackwood, J. & Co., London
922 ... 193
; 1 Blair, James T., Manchester
... 199
s 1 Blakeley, E. F. & Co., Liverpool
688 ... 157
S 1 Boehm, R. & Co., Manchester
551 ... 132
8 1 Bolckow, Vaughan, & Co., Limited, Middlesbrough-on-Tees .
600 ... 141
\ 1 Bolton Iron and Steel Co., Limited (The), Bolton
629 ... 148
1 1 Bond and Riley, Manchester
17 ... 45
2 1 Bonnet, C. J. & Co., Les Petits Fils de, Lyons, France
315 ... 84
S 1 Boosey & Co., London
265 ... 80
fl 1 Borg, Michael, Strada Reale, Valetta, Malta
336 ... 87
a 1 Bradburn, Thomas & Sons, Birmingham
463a... 117
f 1 Bradbury & Co., Limited, Oldham and Manchester
473 ... 119
!fi 1 Bradford, Thomas & Co., Salford
412 ... 104
e 1 Bradford Manufacturing Co. (The)^ Bradford, Yorkshire . . . .
389 ... 99
a 1 Bradshaw, George Bagnall, Bowdon, Cheshire
^ 1
... 199
i rr--— -TT
01
.Si
i
INDEX— GENERAL EXHIBITS.
Bmdwell, Tom tt Co., Coiigletou
Bratby and Hiiichliffe, Manchester
Bratby and HinchclifFe, Manchester
Brehmer, Augustus, London
Bristol "Wagon AVorks Co., Limited (The), Bristol
Briggs, Thomas, Darwen
Briggs, Priestley and Sons, Laister Dyke
Briggs, Thomas, Manchester
Briggs & Co., Manchester
British and Foreign Bible Soeiety, Manchester
British Alizarine Co., Limited (The), London
Brooke, Joseph and Sons, Hipperholme, near Halifax
Brookes, AVarwick, Manchester
Brown, J. Milman, Isle of Wight
BrownAVesthead, (T.C.), Moore & Co., Staffordshire
Brown and Backhouse, Liverpool
Broome, Hall worth and Foster, Manchester
Brooke, Simpson, and Spiller, Limited, London
Broxburn Oil Co., Limited (Tiie), Glasgow
Brown, William, Manchester
Brown, Robert & Co., Manchester
Broadbent & Son, Manchester
Broadhurst & Co., Bradford, Manchester
Broadbent, Thomas & Sons, Huddersfield
Brooke, Edward & Sons, Huddersfield
Brown-Westhead, (T. C.), Moore & Co., Staffordshire Potteries
Browett, Bindley & Co., Salford
Broughton, James & Co., Manchester.
Broadbent, Robert & Sons, Stalybridge
Brooks, Samuel, Manchester
Bmndrit &: Co., Runcorn
Brunner, Mond, & Co., Limited, Northwich
Bruton, J. E., Isle of Man
Biyant and May, Limited, London
Buckley, William & Co., Sheffield
Buckley and Crossley, Dukinfield, Manchester
Burroughs, Wellcome, & Co., London
Burroughs, Wellcome & Co., London
Buits & Co., Limited, Slieffield
STAND
PAGE
318 ..
. 85
511 ..
. 126
921 ..
. 193
452 ..
. 114
89 ..
. 53
91 ..
. 53
157 ..
. 63
214 ..
. 70
339 ..
. 87
182 ..
. 66
736 ..
,. 167
105 ..
,. 55
. 199
,. 199
175 ..
. 65
989a..
,. 157
58 .,
,. 50
732 .,
,. 167
750 ..
,. 170
844 ..
,. 183
855 .,
,. 184
865 .,
.. 185
881 .,
.. 188
401 .,
.. 101
898 .,
.. 190
901
.. 190
518 ..
,. 128
439 .,
,. 110
440 .,
,. 110
443 .,
.. Ill
907 .,
.. 191
816 .,
.. 180
,. 199
919 .,
.. 193
607 .,
.. 144
540 ..
,. 130
724 .
.. 165
928 .,
.. 194
576 ..
. 137
LI
INDEX— GENERAL EXHIBITS.
389
STAND PAGE
Bury, Isaac, Salford 1 ... 48
Bury, H., Manchester 364 ... 94
Buser and Keiser, Laufenbourg and Liestal, Switzerland 171 ... 65
Butterley Co. (The), Alfreton, Derbyshire 668 ... 154
Butterworth Brothers, Limited, Newton Heath, Manchester... 547 ... 131
Butenberg, Heusch & Co., Aix-la-Chapelle, Germany 158 ... 63
Butterworth and Dickinson, Burnley 425 ... 106
Byrne, WiUiam Joseph, Richmond, Surrey ... 199
Byrom, Robert, Delph, near Manchester 161 ... 63
c
Ccesar, Henry, Knutsford, Cheshire 676 ... 155
Caldicott, J. & T. R, Coventry 328 ... 86
Calvert, John & Sons, Manchester 545 ... 131
Cameron, John, Salford 405 ... 102
Cammell, Charles & Co., Sheffield 569 ... 134
Carter, Alfred & Co., Liverpool 109 ... 56
CaiT, James & Sons, Manchester 160 ... 63
Casartelli, Joseph, Manchester 712 ... 163
Casebourne & Co., Limited, West Hartlepool 909 ... 191
Cash, J. ct J., Coventry ‘ 328 ... 86
Cassell & Co., Limited, London 52 ... 49
Cayzer, Irvine & Co., Glasgow 195 ... 68
Century Guild of Artists, London 225 ... 74
Chadwick, James & Bro., near Bolton 24 ... 46
Chadwick, James and Brother, Bolton 769 ... 172
Chanot, G. A., Manchester 242 ... 77
Charlesworth, S. & Co., Oldham 477 ... 120
Chat wood, Samuel, Bolton 525 ... 129
Chatwood, Arthur Brunei, Prestwich 239 ... 76
Chatwood’s Patent Safe and Lock Co., Limited, Manchester ... 592 ... 140
Cheavin, George, Boston, England 936 ... 195
Cheetham, John & Sons, Hyde, near Manchester 209 ... 70
Chiswick Soap Co., Chiswick 848 ... 184
Chorlton, William & Co., Manchester 331 ... 86
Chorlton, Isaac & Co., Salford 63 ... 51
Christy, W. M. & Sons, Limited, Manchester 20 ... 45
390
INDEX— GENERAL EXHIBITS.
STAND PAGE
Christy, Thomas & Co., London 787 ... 176
Chubb’s Lock and Safe Co., Limited, London and Manchester. 272a ... 81
Chubb A Sons’ Lock and Safe Co., Limited, Manchester 591 ... 140
City Wood Engi’aving Co., (The), (Farrell and Jepson), Man-
chester 1140 ... 215
Claviger Cycle Co., Limited (The), Manchester 75 ... 52
Clarke, Archer, London ... 200
Clarke, John T., Manchester 125 ... 58
Clark, Bunnett, & Co., Limited, Manchester 508 ... 126
Clark, Robert Ingham A Co., London 755 ... 170
Clark, Robert Ingham A Co., London 755 ... 170
Claj’ton, James and Joseph, Manchester 937 ... 195
Clayton, Marsdens & Co., Limited, Halifax 325 ... 85
Clegg, Neville, Altrincham 220 ... 71
Clegg, Margaret, Oldham 528 ... 129
Cliff, Joseph & Sons, Wortley, near Leeds 904 ... 191
Coats, J. and P., Paisley 773 ... 173
Cobbett, "W. Willson, London 556 ... 132
Cochran, P. A Co., Liverpool 923 ... 194
Cockshoot, Joseph & Co., Manchester 87, 87 a ... 53
Cockill, John & Sons, Liversedge, Yorkshire 403 a... 102
Colas, Laurent, Ardennes, France 74 ... 52
Cole, James, Manchester 275 ... 81
Coleby, Thomas, Manchester 496 ... 124
Colledge Roy & Co., Manchester 864 ... 185
Collett, J. M. & Co., Gloucester 823 ... 181
College of Agriculture (The) Downton, near Salisbury 812 ... 179
Collinge, W. A J. S., Burnley .’ 227 ... 75
Collier, John, Birmingham ... 200
Committee of Section III 779 ... 173
Committee of Section III 716 ... 164
Committee of Section III 781 ... 174
Common, Andrew Ainslie, F.R.S. London ... 200
Constantine, T. J., London 678 ... 156
Cooke, William Co., Leeds 62 ... 50
Cooke, W. H. & Co., Manchester 93 ... 54
Co-operative Wholesale Society, Limited, Manchester, Leicester,
and Heckmondwike, Yorks 151 ... 62
Co-operative Wholesale Society, Limited, Manchester 949 a... 197
INDEX— GENERAL EXHIBITS.
1
391 ! I
Cooper, Corah & Sons, Leicester
STAND
170 ...
PAGE 5i|
64
d
Cooper, Box & Co., London
884 ...
188 ^
Cornbrook Brewery Co., Limited, Manchester
952 ...
197 I?
Coiirlander, L., Kimberley, South Africa
1132 ...
214
Cowan, W. & B., Manchester
568 ...
134 ^
Cowan, William, Edinburgh
469a...
119 h
Cow burn, Anne, Manchester
90 ...
53 j
Cowley, John & Son, Hyde, near Manchester
470 ...
119
Cowles Electric Smelting and Aluminium Co., London
801 ...
178
Cowlishaw, Nicol & Co., Limited, Manchester
338 ...
87
Craven, Dunnill & Co., Limited, near Ironbridge, Shropshire
121 ...
58
Craven Brothers, Limited, Manchester
483 ...
120
Craven Brothers, Limited, Manchester
366a...
94
Crewdson, Crosses & Co., Limited, Manchester
13 ...
44
Credenda Cold-drawn Seamless Steel Tube Company (The),
Birmingham
492a...
122
Critchley, Thomas, Blackburn
910 ...
192 j
Crighton & Sons, Manchester
442 ...
111 I
Crook, John & Sons, Preston
192 ...
67 j
Crookes, Henry, A.R.S.M., M.S.T.E., London
757 ...
171 1
Crooke, W., Edinburgh
...
200
Crompton, Edward, Manchester
243 ...
77
Crosfield, Joseph & Sons, Wamngton
838 ...
183
Croft Granite, Brick, & Concrete Co (The) Leicester
895 ...
189 j
Croft Granite, Brick, and Concrete Co. (The), Croft, near
Leicester
687 ...
157 !
Crowley, John & Co., Manchester
624 ...
1-^7 j
Crossley Brothers, Limited, Openshaw
355 ...
92 I
Crossley Brothers, Limited, Openshaw
484 ...
121 I 1
Crossley Brothers, Limited, Openshaw
1347a...
246 1
Crossley, William, Failsworth, near Manchester
373 ...
95 1
Crossland, William, Miles Platting, Manchester
449 ...
113 p
Crompton, Thomas, Ashton, near Wigan
462a...
116 1 [
Cullerne, C. B. & Co., Liverpool
824 ...
181 I 1
Currie, William & Co., Edinburgh
883 ...
188 ! 1
Cur wen, J. & Sons, London
133 ...
lal
Cussons, George, Manchester
134 ...
59 Iff'
Curtis, Sons & Co., Manchester
383 ...
97 -J::;
^ — — ~nA\
D
STAND
Dacca Twist Co. (The) — Rylaiids and Sons, Limited, Man-
chester and London 49, 50 .
Dale, William, Manchester 110 .
Dalton, Barton & Co., Coventry 328 .
Davenport, J. & Co., Manchester 231, 232 .
Davis and Sneade, Liverpool 683 .
Davis, Joseph & Co., London 705 .
Davis, George E., Manchester 927 .
Davis, Alfred A., London, "W.C 1134 .
Davies, E. "W., Old Trafiford
Dawson (Dan), Brothers, Huddersfield 737 .
Dawson, Arthur George, Macclesfield 1112 .
Decorators’ Supply Co., (The) Manchester 253 .
Dee Oil Co. (The), Manchester 751 .
Dempster, Robert A Sons, Elland, Yorkshire 479 .
Dempster, Robert & John, Newton Heath, Manchester 601 .
Devoge & Co., Manchester 372 .
Dick, R. <fe J., Glasgow 469 .
Dickinson, William & Sons, Blackburn 330 .
Director General, Ordance Survey, Southampton
Distillers’ Co., Limited (The), Edinburgh 940 .
Dixon, John & Sons, Steeton, via Leeds 537 .
Dixon, Charles & Co., Blackburn 797 .
Dixon, Henry & Sons, London
Dixon, Isaac & Co., Liverpool 1347 d.
Dobson A Barlow, Bolton : 382 ,
Doulton A Co., London 258 ,
Doulton A Co., Manchester 272 .
Doulton A Co., London 702 ,
Doulton A Co., London 902 ,
Doulton A Co., London 1118
Doulton A Co., Manchester 195 b
Dovcston’s, Manchester 237
Downing A Co., Manchester 472
Dowson Economic Gas and Power Co. (The), Limited, London 662 ,
Dronsfield Bros., Oldham 387
Duffy, M. C. A Son, London 100
PAGE
49
56
86
75
156
162
194
215
200
167
212
78
170
120
142
95
118
93
200
196
130
177
201
246
97
79
81
161
190
213
68
76
119
152
92
55
INDEX— GENERAL EXHIBITS.
393
STAND PAGE
Dugdale, John & Sons, Blackburn 489 ... 123
Dnnderdale, Wood A Co., Manchester 409 ... 103
Dux, Albert & Co., Salford 56 ... 50
E
Eades, R. E., London 1115 ... 212
East Lancashire Chemical Co. (The), Fairfield, near Manchester 721 ... 165
Ebbw Vale Steel, Iron, and Coal Co. Limited, Monmouthshire, 626 ... 147
Ebner, James F., London 119 ... 57
Eccles, Edmund, Bury, Lancashire ... 201
Edge, J., Manchester ... 201
Edwards Bros., Fenton, Staffordshire 102 ... 55
Electric Portable Battery and Gas Igniting Co. (The),
Limited, Salford 619 ... 146
Ellam, Jones, and Co., Derby 759 ... 171
Ellerbeck, J. H. T., Walton, near Liverpool ... 201
Elkington & Co., Manchester 27 ... 46
Elliott, Edminson and Olney, Manchestei 141 ... 61
Erlaucht Graf von Harrach’sche Glasfabrik (Count Harrach’s
Glassworks), Neuwelt, Bohemia, Austria 202 ... 69
Ermen and Roby, Patricroft, Manchester 771 ... 172
Eureka Salt Manufacturing Co., Limited (The), Northwich ... 836 ... 182
Evans, Sons, and Co., Liverpool 939 ... 196
F
Fairburn and Hall, Manchester 552 ... 132
Fairclough, George, Manchester 862 ... 185
Fahlberg, List & Co., Salbke, Westerhiisen, near Magdeburg... 734 ... 167
Farron, Squire, Ashton-nnder-Lyne 553 ... 132
Faulkner, Robert, London ... 201
Faulder, Henry & Co., Stockport 492 ... 123
Fawcett, Preston & Co., Liverpool 447 ... 113
Fawcett, Thomas C., Leeds 356 ... 92
Fewster, Thomas & Son, Hull 766 ... 170
Fielding, Robert & Son, Manchester 42 ... 48
Field, J. C. and J., London 752 ... 170
Finlayson, Bousfield & Co., Johnstone, Scotland, and Grafton,
United States 168 ... 64
^ 1 '
394 INDEX— GENERAL EXHIBITS.
STAND
PAGE
Firth, Thomas and Sons, Limited, Sheffield
620 ..
. 146
Fisichella, Antonino, Liverpool
.. nil ..
. 212
Fitton, F. A., and Son, Manchester
531 ..
. 129
Fleming, A. B. A Co., Limited, Edinburgh
859 ..
. 184
Fleming, Reid A Co., Greenock
172 ..
. 65
Follows and Bate, Limited, Gorton, Manchester
504 ..
. 125
Follows and Bate, Limited, Manchester
703 ..
. 162
Follows and Bate, Limited, Manchester
... 1345 ..
. 245
Follows and Bate, Limited, Manchester
106 ..
. 55
Forder & Co., Limited, London and Wolverhampton
. 52
Fordsmith, F., Salford
597 ..
. 141
Fordsmith, Herbert, Manchester
593*..
. 141
Ford-Stanley, 'William, London Bridge
. 206
Forsyth Brothers, Manchester
267 ..
. 80
Foster, James, Manchester
... 1107 ..
. 212
Fourness, H. A Co., Manchester
136 ..
. 59
Fraiikenburg, Isidor, Salford
888 ..
. 188
Franklin, F. W., Coventry
328 ..
. 86
Franklin, G. Carey, Coventry
328 ..
. 86
Frazer Brothers, Birmingham
65 ..
. 51
Freeman, Joseph B. & Co., London
758 ..
. 171
French, Gilbert James, Bolton
35 ..
. 47
Frictionless Engine Packing Co., Manchester
549 ..
. 131
Frilli, Antonio, Florence
281 ..
. 82
Fry, J. S. and Sons, Bristol and London
438 ..
. no
Frv, Samuel & Co., Limited, Kingston-on-Thames
,. 201
Furnival A Co., Reddish, near Stockport ;
454 ..
114
G
Gamble, Jos. C. & Son, St. Helens
819 .
.. 180
Galloway, John, Manchester
453 .
.. 114
Gandy Belt Manufacturing Co. (The), Limited, Livei-pool ...
560 .
.. 133
Gare, Tliomas, Stockport
497
.. 124
Garnett, Robert A Sons, 'Warring-ton
255 .
.. 78
Garroway, R. A J., Glasgow
832 .
.. 182
Garside, H., Manchester
459a.
.. 115
Gaskell, Deacon & Co., 'Widncs
815 .
.. 180
INDEX— GENERAL EXHIBITS.
STAND PAGE
Geldart & Co., Liverpool 851 ... 184
Gemmell and Harter, Manchester 48 ... 49
Gibson, J. P., Hexham ... 201
Giddings and Dacre, Manchester 150 ... 62
Gilchrist, Percy C., Westminster, S.W 800 ... 177
Gillott, Joseph & Sons, Birmingham 31 ... 47
Gillott, Joseph & Sons, Birmingham 487 ... 121
Glass Decoration Co., Limited (The), London 177 ... 65
Glenfield Co., Limited, Kilmarnock 650 ... 152
Glover, Walter T. & Co., Salford 582 ... 138
Goadsby & Co., Manchester 762 ... 171
Godbold, Hy. Jas., St. Leonards-on-Sea ... 202
Goodall, E. & Co., Manchester 226 ... 75
Goodbrand and Holland, Manchester 432 ... 107
Goodbrand & Co., Manchester 406 ... 102
Gossage, William & Sons, Widnes 872 ... 186
Gotz, J. R., London ... 202
Grafton, F. W. & Co., Manchester .. 44 ... 49
Gratrix, Samuel, Jim., Manchester ... 202
Gray, Smith, & Bennitt, Wath-upon-Dearne, Yorkshire 847 ... 183
Great Rocks Lime & Stone Co. (The), Dove Holes, near
Stockport : 900 ... 190
Green, T. A., Grassmere, Westmorland ... 202
Green, Edward & Son, Manchester and Wakefield 521 ... 128
Greenall & Co., Manchester 422 ... 106
Greenbank Alkali Works Co., Limited (The), St. Helens 831 ... 182
Greenhalgh, John & Sons, Oldham 446 ... 113
Greenwood, Wm., Manchester ... 202
Greer, Mrs. Annie, Pendleton, Manchester ... 202
Gresham and Craven, and The Vacuum Brake Co., Limited,
Manchester 621 ... 146
Griess, J. Peter, Ph. D., F.R.S., Burton-on-Trent 741 b... 168
Griffiths Brothers & Co., London 763 ... 171
Gridley & Co., London 876 ... 187
Grimshaw Brothers, Clayton, Manchester 786 ... 175
Guest, Thomas & Co., Manchester 954 ... 197
Guetta, Guiseppe, Venice 263 ... 80
Guetta, Guiseppe, Da Mula’s Palace, Murano and Venice 1136 ... 215
Gunther, William, Oldham 577 ... 137
396
INDEX— GENERAL EXHIBITS.
H
PAGE
95
STAND
Hacking A Co., Biuy
Hadley, Geo., Lincoln •••
Had wen, John & Sons, near Halifax 320 ... 85
Hadfield’s Steel Foundry Co., Sheffield 602 ... U2
Hahlo, Hermann J., Manchester 12 ... 44
Hall, Ralph & Co., Manchester 57 ... 50
Hall, John A Co., Manchester 288 ... 83
Halliday, R. & Co., Middleton, near Manchester 681 ... 156
Halliday, Joseph & Co., Newton, Manchester 935 ... 195
Hamblet, Joseph, AVest Bromwich 111^ ••• 57
Hammersley, AVilliam & Co., Leek J29 ... 86
Handy side, Andrew & Co., Limited, Derby 579 ... 137
Hannay & Co., AVest Gorton, Alanchester 949 ... 196
Hanson, Scott, & Co., Stockport 215 ... 71
Harden Star & Sinclair Fire Appliance Co., Limited, Man-
chester •••
Hardman & Holdens, Alanchester 746 ... 169
Hardman A Co., Manchester 747 ... 169
Hargreaves, AATlliam, Alanchester 241 ... <6
Harling and Todd, Burnley ^33 ..107
Hart, David & Co., London 585 ... 139
Harrington, J. & Co., Coventry 197 ... 69
Harrison, F. J. & Co., Limited, Leicester .. 729 ... 166
Harrison, George King, Stourbridge 894 ... 189
Harrison, Ale Gregor & Co., Leigh, Lancashire 362 ... 93
Han'ison, AA' alter H., Alanchestei ...202
Harrison, R. AA". & Co., Blackburn 465 a... 11/
Harris, J. F. & G., Finsbury, London, E.C H26 ... 214
Haslam, John & Co. Limited, Alanchester 10 ... 44
Haslam Foundry and Engineering Co., Limited (The), Derby... 493 a... 124
Hattersley, Thomas Sands, Alanchester 146 ... 62
Haviland A Co., Paris ^61 ... 80
Haworth, Richard A Co., Alanchester 18 ... 4o
Hayward, Thomas & Co., Alanchester 262 ... 80
Hayward, AA^ Scott & Co., Alanchester 1138 ... 215
Hazlehurst & Sons, Runcorn 849 ... 184
Heath, Vernon, London ^^2
INDEX- GENERAL EXHIBITS.
STAND
856 ..
379 ..
471 ..
417
247
Health Soap Co. (The), Bootle
Heaton, Ralph & Sons, Birminsiham
Heap, Joshua & Co., Limited, Ashton-under-Lyne
Heenan and Fronde, Manchester
Heighway & Son, Manchester
Hembry, B. & Co., Manchester 1106 ..
Henderson, A. L., London
Henshaw and Loebell, Limited, Manchester 277 ..
Henshaw & Co., Manchester 278 ..
Henry, A. & S. & Co., Manchester 54 ..
Hepplestone, Thomas, Manchester 147 ..
Hepworth Iron Co. (The), Hazlehead, near Sheffield 98 ..
Her Majesty’s Postmaster-General 216 a .
Hertz, Peter, Copenhagen, Denmark 285 ..
Heyde, J. Bennett Von der, Manchester 474 ..
Heywood, John, Manchester 218 ..
Hey wood, John, Manchester , 722 ..
Heywood, John, Manchester 129 ..
Heywood, John, Manchester 577 b..
Hick, Hargreaves, & Co., Bolton 358 ..
Higham, James, Newton Heath, Manchester 1102 ..
Higham, Joseph, Manchester .’ 1133 ..
Higson, John, Blackburn ^ 843 ..
Hill, Arden & Co., Birmingham 688 a..
Hind and Lund, Preston ^82 ..
Hind and Lund, Preston 420 ..
Hinde & Son, Birmingham 510 ..
Hindle, Norton & Co., Oldham 354 ..
Hodgkinson, P. M., Staly bridge 428 ..
Hodgkins, Margaret, Withington, near Manchester 1128 ..
Hodgkinson & Co., Limited, Manchester
Hogg, J. H., Kendal
Hogg, Henry & Son, Congletou
Hohensausen & Co., Manchester
Holland, William & Sons, Manchester...
Holland, William & Sons, Manchester...
Holden and Brooke, Salford
Hollins Mill Co. (The), Manchester
Holroyd & Scott, Bradford
509
327
745
3
154
555
19
59
PAGE
. 184
. 96
. 119
. 105
77
. 211
. 202
. 82
. 82
. 50
. 62
. 54
. 71
. 83
. 119
. 71
. 165
. 59
. 137
. 92
. 211
. 214
. 183
. 157
. 120
. 105
. 126
. 92
. 106
. 214
. 126
. 203
. 85
. 169
. 43
. 63
. 132
. 45
. 50
h
k I
-.1
INDEX— GENERAL EXHIBITS.
Jackson, Fred. E. tfe Co., Manchester
Jackson, Fred. E. & Co., Manchester
Jacobson, Nathaniel, Manchester
J agger, E. tfc Co., Oldham
Jazowski, J. L., Liverpool
Jeffrey & Co., London
Holt, William Sl Sons, Manchester
Hopkinson, J. & Co., Huddersfield
Horne, W. C., London
Horrocks, John & Son, Manchester
Horrocks & Co., Ashton-under-Lyne
Horrockses, ^liller & Co., Preston
HoiTockses, Miller ct Co., Preston
Horsfall and Bickham, Pendleton
Houghton, George & Son, London
Howard, James and Frederick, Bedford
Howard and Bullough, Accrington
Howards & Sons, Stratford, E
Howell & Co., Sheffield
Howorth, James, M.S.A., Earn worth, near Bolton
Hughes & Young, Manchester
Hughes, E. Griffiths, Manchester
Hulme and Lund, Manchester
Hulse & Co., Salford
Hunter, Joseph & (.'o., Manchester
Hyde, Robert & Co., near Stalybridge
I
Ickelheimer, Karl, Market Erbach, Bavaria
luce Forge Co., Wigan
Ingham, John, Sale, Cheshire
Ingham, John ann Sons, Thornton, near Bradford
Inman and International Steamship Co., Limited, Liverpool...
Ij:>sen Terra Cotta and Fine Art Pottery (The), Copenhagen
and London
Irvin and Sellers, Preston and Liverpool
STAND
5 ...
PAGE
. 43
610 ..,
. 144
451 ..
. 114
448 ..,
. 113
461a..
. 116
36 ..
. 47
188 ..
. 66
574 ..
. 135
. .
. 203
627 ..
. 147
437 ..
. 110
792 ..
. 176
• 628 ..
. 147
499 ..
. 124
195a ..
. 68
546 ..
. 131
507 ..
. 126
468 ..
. 118
224 ..
. 74
530 ..
. 129
1129 ..
. 214
647 ..
. 151
. 203
460a..
. 116
193 ..
. 67
183 .,
.. 66
458b.,
.. 115
426 .
.. 106
9 .
.. 44
210 .
.. 70
616 .
.. 145
289 .
.. 83
251 .
.. 78
INDEX— GENERAL EXHIBITS.
399
iSTAND PAGE
Jessop, William and Sons, Limited, Sheffield 366 ... 94
Jewsbury & Brown, Manchester 919 a... 193
Johnson, Richard, and Nephew, Manchester 564 ... 134
Johnson, William, Leeds 673 ... 155
Johnson, Jabez, Son, Allsop, & Co., Manchester 16 ... 45
Johnson, Richard, Clapham, and Morris, Manchester 195c... 68
Johnson, Matthey and Co., London 802 ... 178
Johnson, John and Co., Liverpool 918 ... 193
Johnston, John L., London 947 ... 196
Johnson, G. J., and I. Watts, Hale, Altrincham ... 203
Jones, John, Manchester ... 203
Joseph and Glnckstein, Victoria West, South Africa 1135 ... 215
Jo wett, William M., Manchester 929 ... 194
Junction Iron Works Co., Limited, Newton Heath, Manchester 396 ... 100
K
Kay Brothers, Stockport 794 ... 176
Kaye, Anthony R. & Sou, Huddersfield 828 ... 181
Keay, E. C. and J., West Bromwich 682 ... 156
Kearns, Allan & Co, Manchester 26 ... 46
Keene, Richard, Derby ... 203
Keighley, George, Burnley .- • 435 ... 107
Keighley Timber and Saw Mills Co., (The,) and 'Planing,
Moulding, Turning, and Steam Joinery Works, Keighle}",
Yorkshire 120 ... 58
Kendall and Gent, Manchester 464 ... 117
Kendal, Milne, & Co., Manchester 254 ... 78
Kendal, Milne & Co., Manchester 1347b... 246
Kenyon, William & Sons, Dukinfield 535 ... 130
Kensington School of Art Embroidery, London 204 ... 69
Ken* and Hoegger, Manchester 776 ... 175
Kershaw, Joseph & Co., Hollinwood, near Manchester 869 ... 185
Kershaw and Swindells, Macclesfield 330 ... 86
Kershaw, Abraham and Son, Bradford, Yorkshire 460b... 116
Kershaw, Joshua & Son, Bolton 538 ... 130
Kilvert, N., and Sons, Manchester 839 ... 183
King, Frederick & Co., Limited, Belfast 920 ... 193
Kneeshaw, Lupton & Co., Liverpool • 892 ... 189
TiA
it!
400
INDEX— GENERAL EXHIBITS.
Knowles, Samuel & Co., near Bury.
Kiihn, B., Manchester
Kurtz, A. G. & Co., St. Helens
Lachenal A Co., London
Lamb, James, Manchester
Lang, Leon, Manchester
Lancashire and Yorkshire Productive Society, Limited (The),
Littleborough, near Manchester
Lancashire Felt Co., (The), Limited, Denton, near Manchester
Lancashire and Cheshire Telephone Exchange Co,, Limited...
Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway Co., Manchester
Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway Co., Manchester
Lancaster and Tonge, Manchester
Lange, Paul, Liverpool
Lauder, Archibald, Glasgow
Laverinc Chemical Co. (The), Manchester
Lawson, T. W., Manchester
Lawton, J. A. & Co., Liverpool
Lawrence, Thomas & Son, Brackwell, Berkshire
Lay cock, William & Sons, Keighley, Yorkshire
Learoyd, S. Huddersfield
Leclorc, Mercier, Vve., Paris
Leech Brothers and Hoyle, Manchester
Lee, George and Sons, Limited, Wakefield
Lee, Arthur H., Bolton
Lee and Hargreaves, Manchester
Lee Spinning Co. (The), Manchester
Lee and Hunt, Nottingham
Lees, Asa & Co., Limited, Oldham
Leek Embroidery Society, Leek
Leeds Forge Co., Limited, Leeds
Leigh, John W., Noi thenden, Manchester
Leroy, F. & Co., Manchester
Levinstein, I. & Co., Manchester
Levi, Samuel Harris, London
Lever, Brothers, AVarrington
STAND
47 .
PAGE
.. 49
735 .
.. 167
825 .
.. 181
274 ..
,. 81
252 ..
,. 78
41 ..
,. 48
163 ..
. 64
208 ..
. 70
217 ..
. 71
640 ..
. 152
635 ..
. 150
407 ..
. 103
. 203
941 ..
. 196
891 ..
. 190
511a..
. 127
78 ..
. 25
896 ..
. 192
562 ..
. 137
221 .
. 71
213 ..
. 70
140 ..
. 60
166 ..
. 64
2i^8 ..
. 76
6 ..
. 43
385a..
. 99
481 ..
. 120
488 ..
. 122
340 ..
. 88
630 ..
. 149
. 203
548 ..
. 131
742 ..
. 169
1114 ..
. 212
873 ..
. 189
INDEX— GENERAL EXHIBITS.
Leveson and Sons, Manchester
Lewis and Allonby, London
Liebig’s Extract of Meat Co., Limited, London
Liebig’s Wine Co., London
Light, James A Son, Liverpool
Lilley, H. L. A Co., Manchester
Linlithgow Oil Co., Limited (The), Edinburgh
Livesey, Henry, Limited, Blackburn
Lloyd, Henry Fleetwood, Liverpool
Lloyd and Lloyd, Birmingham
Locke and Son, Manchester
Lofiego. Gino, Turin, Italy
Longford Wire, Iron, and Steel Co , Limited (The) 'Warrington
London and Manchester Reflector Co., Manchester
London and County Photographic Co., London
London and County Photographic Co., London
London and Counties Tea Co. (The), Manehester
London Flower Girl Mission
London and County Photographic Co., London
London Stereoscopic and Photographic Co., Limited, London
Lord Brothers, Todmorden
Lovibond, Joseph W., Salisbury ■
Lowcock, Arthur, Limited, Shrewsbury
Lowe, David A Sous, Edinburgh
Lowe, Charles A Co., Reddish
Lugard, J. A., London
Luke and Spencer, Limited, Manchester
Lumb, James, Elland, Yorkshire
Lyons, Joseph, Kilburu, London
Ljons, H. and J., Manchester
Lysaght, John, Limited, Bristol
Macintosh, Charles & Co., Manchester
Macpherson, Donald & Co., Manchester
Macniven and Cameron, Edinburg h ...
Madeley, David, Manchester
Maden, James H., Manchester
401
STAND
PAGE
92 ...
54
317 ...
85
938 ...
196
942 ...
, 196
870 ..,
. 186
913 ..,
. 196
748 ...
186
395 ..
. 100
77 ..
. 52
651 ..
.157
273 ..
. 81
181 ..
. 66
66 ..
. 51
138 ..
. 60
218 a..
. 71
5 / / A . .
. 148
943 ...
196
1124 ..
. 213
. .
. 203
. 203
361 ..
. 93
704 ..
. 168
414 ..
. 104
686 ..
. 162
739 ..
. 169
. 204
463 ..
. 116
541 ..
. 130
1122 ..
. 213
127 ..
. 58
685 ..
. 157
885 ..
. 188
761 ..
. 171
122 ..
. 58
376 ..
. 96
1121
Magnesium Metal Co., Patricroft, Manchester
Main, R. and A., Glasgow
Main, Mrs., London
Mallabone, John, London
Mallet, John and Sou, Bath
Manchester Photographic Society, Manchester
Manchester Art Museum (The Committee of the), Manchester
Manchester Amateur Photographic Club, Manchester
Manchester Creamery, Broughton
Manchester and District Edison Electric Light Co., Limited
(The), Manchester
Manchester Water Meter Co., Limited (The), Manchester ...
Manchester, Sheffield, and Lincolnshire Railway Co., Limited
(The), Manchester
Manchester, Sheffield, and Lincolnshire Railway Co., Limited
(The), Manchester
Manchester Electric Supply Co., Limited, Manchester
Manchester Aniline Co., Manchester
Manchester Ship Canal Company, Manchester
Mandleberg, J. A Co., Manchester
Mann, G. & Co., Leeds
Mansfield, Edwin and Sons, Manchester
Mansell, G. M., Manchester
Mapplebeck, John Wilkes A Co., Birmingham
Marriott, Henry & Co., Manchester
Marriott, Henry A Co., Manchester
Marsden, John, Manchester *.
Marwick, W. and M., Edinburgh
Mark, John, Manchester
Margerison, Joshua & Son, Preston
Marshall, James, Glasgow
Mason, John, Macclesfield
Massey, B. and S., Opeushaw, Manchester
Mather & Platt, Manchester
Mather and Platt, Manchester
Matthews and Yates, Manchester
Maw & Co., near Ironbridge, Shropshire
McCorquodale A Co., Limited, London
McConnel A Co., Limited, Manchester
STAND
804 ...
PAGE
178
95 ...
54
. . .
204
196 ...
69
284 ...
83
. . .
204
68 ...
51
. . .
204
675 ...
155
1347 ...
246
595 ...
141
641 ...
150
643 ...
150
484a...
121
738 ...
167
190 ...
67
880 ...
187
458 ...
115
671 ...
155
117 ...
57
550 ...
131
2 ...
43
393 ...
100
118 ...
57
493 ...
124
290 ...
83
842 ...
183
944 ...
196
.322 ...
85
423 ...
106
384 ...
98
664 ...
154
498 ...
124
103 ...
55
458a...
115
22 ...
45
INDEX— GENERAL EXHIBITS.
PAGK
166
STAND
AIcDougall, Brothers, Manchester 726
McFarlane, William, Hey wood, near Manchester 780
McFarlane, Strang & Co., Limited, Glasgow 672
McIntyre, Hogg, & Co., Manchester 21
AIcKechnie and Duncan, St. Helens 808
McKellen, S. D., Alanchester
McLintock and Sons, Barnsley 167
McMullen, H. & Son, Hereford 79
McMurdo, James, Manchester 485
McNaught & Co., London 81
McNaught, John and William, Rochdale 399
Mellor, AVilliam, Alanchester 897
Merchant, William and Sons, Manchester 178
Merck, C., Darmstadt, Germany 788
Merieux and Beaulieu fils, Limoges, France 152
Merrill, D. Alexander, Manchester 124
Meyer, Enrico & Co., Milan, Italy 423
Mills, Samuel, Manchester 211
Milligan, J. and Son, Buxton 319
Millar, Adam & Co., Glasgow 706
Mills, Edgar C., Manchester 403
Millward and Cryer, Manchester 795
Millies, E. D., & Brother, Manchester 796
Milner, James C., Alanchester
Milner’s Safe Co , Limited, Manchester 598
Minton, R. R. & Co., Liverpool 767
Mitchell, William and Son, Manchester 235
Mitchell & Co., Limited, Bury 533
Model Printing Press Co., (The), London 455
Moir, Richard & Co., Accrington 777
Mole, Robert and Sons, Birmingham 283
Monk and Newell, Ruabon, North Wales 94
Montani, Ettore, Rome 291
Moorhouse, Sidney & Co., Stalybridge 544
Moore, Samuel and Son, Manchester 128
Morris, George, Norwich 86
Morris & Co., London 257
Morris, Little & Son, Doncaster 727
Morton, William Scott, Tynecastle, Edinburgh 250
r^a
^>!
j 404 INDEX— GENERAL EXHIBITS.
STAND
PAGE
Morgan, Lomas & Co., Blackley, near Manchester
926 .
.. 194
Morgan and "Wright, York
946 .
... 196
Morton, Thomas Henry, M.D., Sheffield
... 204
Moser, Ludwig, Carlsbad, Bohemia
180 ,
... 66
Moser, Edward, Leeds
388 ,
... -99
Moseley, David & Sons, Manchester
879 ,
... 187
Mostyn Coal and Iron Co. (The), Mostyn, North M^ales
809 ,
... 179
Mottershead & Co., Manchester
791 ,
... 176
Mottershead &, Co,, Manchester
720
... 164
Mottershead & Co., Manchester
723
... 165
^loulton, George, Manchester
397
... 100
Mudd, James & Son, Manchester
... 204
Mudie, C. J., Liverpool and Manchester
198
... 69
Muller, Franz, Bonn, near Rhine, Germany
713
... 164
Murray, David, Manchester
246
... 77
Musgrave, John and Sons, Limited, Bolton
445
... 113
Muspratt, James & Sons, Widness
820
... 180
N
Nairn, M. Co., Kirkcaldy, Scotland
88
... 53
Nasmyth, ^Vilson & Co., Limited, Patricroft, near Manchester
523
... 129
Nasmyth, M^ilson & Co., Limited, Patricroft, near Manchester
611
... 144
Nasmyth, Wilson & Co., Limited, Patricroft, near Manchester
642
... 150
Neill, John, Manchester —
460
... 115
Nestle, Henri, London
948
... 196
Neufeld, L., Berlin
269
... 80
Newall, Henry and Son, Manchester
782
... 173
Newton, Chambers <fe Co., Limited, near Sheffield
588
... 139
Nicholson, J. 0., Macclesfield
341
... 88
Nightingale, Bros., Paterson, New Jersey, U.S.A
368
... 95
Noar, T. and L., Manchester
1346
... 245
Nordenfelt, Thorsten, M.Inst.C.E., London
614
... 145
Novello (ii Son, Manchester
130
... 59.
o
Oates and Green, Horley Green, Halifax
99
... 54
Oldham, Alexander & Sons, Dukinfield
646
... 151
Oliver, Robert tie Co., Manchester
871
... 186
-- ■■ —
Ollivant & Botsford, Manchester
Ollivant and Botsford, Manchester
Ontario Pump Co., Toronto, Canada
“ Onward ” Publishing Office, Manchester
Orme & Sons, Manchester
Orme & Sons, Manchester
Ormerod, John & Sons, Castleton, near Manchester
Osier, F. & C., Birmingham
Osier. Fand. C., Birmingham and London
Oxley, William, Manchester
Owen, Joseph & Sons, Manchester
Padgett, John Howartb, Northwich
Pakeman, "William, Stockport
Palmer, Bevd. Henry James, M.A., Ashton-under- Lyne
Parker, Joseph Walker tfe Co., Chester
Parkinson, Henry & Co., Latchford, Warrington
Parkinson, Thomas, Blackburn
PartoD, Alfred, Birmingham
Patent Exhaust Steam Injector Co., Limited (The), Manchester
Patent Grinding and Polishing Machine Co. (The), Birmingham
Patent Heald and Eyelet Machine Co. (The), Manchester
Patent Paraffin Gas Lighting Co., Limited, Glasgow
Paton, J. C. & Co., Manchester
Patteson, J. and H., Manchester
Paul et Prosper, Henry, Paris
Pearn, Frank & Co. Manchester
Pearsall, James & Co
Pearson and Bennion, Leicester
Pearson & Co., Limited, Manchester
Pease, Henry & Co.’s Successors, Darlington
Pentland, Young J., Edinburgh
Peppe, Thomas Fraser, Arrah, Bengal, India
Percival, Vickers & Co., Limited, Alanchester
Perkins, George, Manchester
Perkins, Son, & Barrett, Bradford, Yorkshire
Pei kin, W. H., Ph.D., F.R.S., Harrow
Pickles, Robert, Burnley ....
405
STAND
PAGE
287 ..
. 83
1116 ..
. 212
669 ..
. 154
123 ..
. 58
248 ..
. 77
1347c..
. 246
562 ..
. 133
256 ..
. 79
768a..
. 170
772 ..
. 175
82 ..
,. 52
826 ..
. 181
756 ..
172
. 205
805 ..
. 178
875 ..
. 186
513 ..
. 127
733 ..
. 167
365 ..
. 94
429 ..
. 107
450b..
. 114
660 ..
. 152
850 ..
. 184
250a..
. 78
, ,
. 202
519 ..
. 128
326 ..
. 85
583 ..
. 138
951 ..
. 197
434 ..
. 107
131 ..
. 59
337 ..
. 87
199 ..
. 69
353 ..
. 92
648 ..
. 151
741c..
. 168
468b..,
. 118
INDEX— GENERAL EXHIBITS.
STAND PAGE
Pickles, John & Son, Hebden Bridge, near Manchester 465 ... 117
Picksley, Sims & Co., Limited, Leigh, Lancashire 573 ... 135
Pickup. J. H. & Co., Bury 380 ... 96
Pintner, 'W. J., Lytham 1104 ... 211
Pizzie and Cramp, Coventry 311 ... 84
Platt Brothers & Co., Limited, Oldham 806 ... 178
Platt, Brothers ct Co., Limited, Oldham 436 ... 107
Plews, Ai-thur S., Manchester 15 ... 44
Pochin, H. D. tfe Co., Limited, Salford 835 ... 182
Pollitt, John S., Manchester ... 205
Pooley, Heniy & Son, Liverpool 584 ... 139
Porritt, Samuel &: Sons, near Rochdale 159 ... 63
Port, John, Manchester 589 ... 140
Post Office, Manchester 216 ... 71
Pott, R. and N., London 827 ... 181
Potter, George & Co., Aldershot 245 ... 77
Power Pulley Co., Limited, Mamthester 567 ... 134
Preston, John, London 1110 ... 212
Price’s, George, Safe, Lock and Engineering Co., Limited,
Wolverhampton 599 ... 141
Price’s Patent Candle Co., Limited, London - 416 ... 105
Price’s Patent Candle Co., Limited, London 749 ... 172
Proctor, James, Burnley 494 ... 124
Proctor & Co., London 203 ... 69
Pumphrey, Alfred, Birmingham ... 205
Pure Silk Manufacturing Co., of Vicenza ('I’he), Vicenza, Italy 332 ... 86
Pursell, W. G. & Co., Leith 833 ... 182
R
Railton, Charles W. and Frank N., Alderley Edge, near
Manchester ... 205
Ratcliff, John and Sons, Leeds 461 ... 116
Ramsbottom, R., Manchester 29 ... 46
Rawlins A Son, llainhill. Prescot 753 ... 172
Raynor, Joseph Sons, Oldham 615 ... 145
Reddaway, Frank and Co., Manchester 464 a... 117
Redfern, James Son, Manchester 153 ... 62
Reid, Charles. Wishaw, N.B ,.. 205
INDEX— GENEBAL EXHIBITS.
407
II
I'i
STAND
PAGE
Reid, Peter, Pendleton, Manchester
14 .
.. 44
|te
Rein, F. C. & Son, London
715 .
.. 164
im
Renold, Hans, Manchester
594 .
.. 141
Renshaw, Edward tfe Co., Manchester
501 .
.. 125
id
Rex Bituminous Coal Co., Manchester
719 .
.. 164 I
iiyf
Richmond, H. Scot & Co-, London
222
.. 74 i
iigi
Rigby, W. & E., Bolton
350 .
.. 91 ;
IPI
Riley, John & Sons, Accrington
814 .
.. 179 1
lyl
Riley, J. H. & Co., Bury
522 .
.. 128 1
!
.. 125 ?
|y|
Robertshaw, James, Alanchester
500 .
|y|
Robinson, Benjamin, Manchester
953 .
.. 197 \
Robinson, Charlotte, Manchester,
229 .
.. 75 \
jn|
Robinson, H. P., Tunbridge Wells
.. 205
Ipl
Robinson, Thomas and Son, Limited, Rochdale
466 .
.. 117 1
|b|
Roberts, Thomas, Manchester
9 0 .
... 195 i
|y|
Roberts, John, Manchester
83 ,
... 55 !
1^1
Robertshaw, Jonathan, Manchester
64 .
... 51
|o
Robertson, William, Galashiels, N.B
155 .
,.. 63
Rodgers, Joseph <fc Sons, Limited, Sheffield
176 .
... 65
jn|
Roscoe, Sir Henry E., M.P., F.R.S., Manchester
741 ,
... 168 J
|s|
Rose, AVilliam & Co., Manchester
572 ,
... 135 1
Rossendale Printing Co. (The), Manchester
Ross-Murray, Robert N., Kinnahaird, Strathpeffer, Rdss-shire
39 .
... 48
... 206 5
... 184 !
... 156 \
1
Roy and Co., Manchester
852 ,
|n|
Royal National Lifeboat Institution
684 ,
Royal National Lifeboat Institution
191
... 67 M
1^1
Round, Frederick, Southport
857 .
... 184 ^
|pl
Royle, John J., Manchester
135 ,
... 59 i
|K|
Royle, John J., Manchester
411
... 103 ;
... 183 i\
|n|
Rowe, T. B. and Co,, Brentford, London
845 ,
|n|
Russell, W. & A. C. & Co., Pendleton, Manchester
111 ,
... 56 l\
1^1
Russell, T. R., Liv^erpool
292 ,
... 84 n
|p|
Rvder, William, Bolton
378 ,
... 96 H
1^1
Rvlands, Dan, Manchester
512 ,
... 127 l\
S 1
ly
s
1
pi
Sadler & Co. Limited, Middlesbrough
744 ,
... 16D ni
fpfi
Saint Denis Dyestuff and Chemical Co. Limited, St. Denis, Paris
740
... 168 jij
ij^ii
Salford and Irwell Rubber Co,, Limited (The), Salford
882 ,
... 188 ii
ii
III
ll
^:| 1 408 INDEX— GENERAL EXHIBITS.
^il: 1 _
m
STAND
PAGE
Salviati, Dr. & Co., London
179 .
. 66
II' Salmon, James, Manchester and London
456a.
. 114
1 Sampson ife Co., Manchester
558 .
. 133
; j Samuel, "William H. & Co., Liverpool
868 .
. 185
Sandeman, John, Glasgw
860 .
. 185
Sanderson, Lewis, Polmadie, Glasgow
514 .
. 127
1 1 Sands and Hunter, London
.
. 206
Sankey Sugar Co., (The), Earlestown
914 .
. 192
Sauvy, A., Manchester
. 206
! Saville, James & Sons, Salford
449a.
. 113
1 Schaffer and Budenberg, Manchester
..609 .
. 144
i Scheu, Charles, Manchester
. 754 .
. 172
1 Schlesinger, Julius, London
505 .
. 125
Schofield, Joshua and Sons, Manchester
359 .
. 93
Schuchardt, Dr. Theodor, Goerlitz, Germany
790 .
. 176
Schulze, Paul, Manchester
164 .
. 64
Schunck, Edward, Ph.D., F.R.S., Kersal, near ^Manchester ...
741a.
. 168
Schwabe, S. & Co., Manchester
45 .
. 49
Schwabe, Frederick Salis, Rhodes, Middleton
.
. 206
Scott, Frederick W., Reddish, near Stockport
571 .
. 135
Scott E. J. Blackburn
912 .
. 192
1 Scown (fc Newling (Mesdames), Manchester
34 .
. 47
• Seebohra and Dieckstahl, Sheffield
613 .
. 145
Seggie, Alex, and Son, Edinburgh
Self- "Winding and Synchronising Clock Co., Limited, (The),
457 .
. 115
I London, Liverpool, and Manchester
1131 .
. 214
1 Senior and Brooks, Limited, Manchester
863 .
. 185
1 Sergeant and Walmsley, Manchester
76 .
. 52
Shanks & Co., Barrhead, N.B
107 .
. 55
■ Shannon File Co. Limited, London
132 .
. 59
a Shai-p, Stewart, &, Co., Limited, Manchester
467 .
. 118
1 Shai-p, Stewart A Co., Limited, Alanchester
636 .
. 14
i Sharratt, "William, Droylsden, near Manchester
925 .
. 194
8 Shaw, David A Co., Manchester
858 .
. 184
S Shaw, Henry A Co., Dukinfield
840 .
. 183
g Sliaw and Connollv, Manchester
707 .
. 162
e Shaw, Wriglit, Brcdbury, near Stockport
374 .
. 95
^ Sheffield Varnish Co. Limited (The), Ouglitv Bridge
768 .
. 170
V Sheldon, Jolin and Richard, Leek
205 .
. 70
i
■ ^ ^ — —
INDEX— GENEPvAL EXHIBITS. 409
STAND PAGE
Shepherd, Alfred, Brighoiise, Yorks 240 ... 76
Shepherd and Ayrton, Manchester 385 ... 99
Shirlaw, A. & Co., Birmingham 670 ... 155
Shorland, E. H., Manchester 677 ... 155
Siegerist, J. C., Manchester 731 ... 166
Silicated Carbon Filter Co., London 933 ... 195
Simon, Henry, Manchester 404 ... 102
Simpson & Godlee, Swinton, near Manchester 55 ... 50
Simpson J. S. and G. F., Brooklyn, E.D., N.Y., U.S.A 475 ... 119
Simon, Henry, Manchester 718 ... 164
Singer, J. W. & Sons, Frome, Somerset 174 ... 65
Singer Manufacturing Co. (The) New York, and Manchester... 351 ... 91
Skelton, Geo. and G. W., Manchester 861 ... 185
Slack and Brownlow, Manchester 932 ... 195
Small and Parks, Manchester 410 ... 103
Smart, Arthur & Co., Manchester 404 a... 102
Smith, Powers, & Co, Coventry 760 ... 171
Smith and Forrest, Manchester 854 ... 184
Smith, James, Manchester 803 ... 178
Smith, Edward & Co., Coalville, Leicestershire 101 ... 55
Smith, Brothers & Co., Paisley 169 ... 64
Smith, Watson, Manchester 234 ... 76
Smith, Watson, Manchester 271 ... 81
Smith, Barber, and Farnworth, Manchester 459 ... 115
Smith and Coventry, Limited, Salford 603 ... 143
Smith, John, Stretford, Manchester 689 ... 157
Stanford, Edward Charles Cortes, Glen wood Dalnuir, Dum-
bartonshire 793 ... 176
Sneade, William Samuel, Liverpool 503 ... 125
Sneyd Colliery and Brickworks Co., Limited, Burslem 903 ... 191
Society of Chemical Industry in Basle, Switzerland 743 ... 169
Spencer, Samuel, Whitefield, near Manchester 390 ... 99
Spence, Peter & Sons, Manchester 829 ... 181
Spicer, James & Sons, London 126 ... 58
Staffordshire Steel and Ingot Iron Co., Limited (The), Bilston,
Staffordshire 622 ... 146
Stanley, William Ford, London 33 ... 47
Stanislas, Julian, Count Ostrorog “ Walery,” London ... 206
Statham, George, Coventry 328 ... 86
PAGE
410 INDEX— GENERAL EXHIBITS.
STAND
Steel Frame Carriage Co. Limited, The, Manchester 85 ..
Steel Co. of Scotland, Limited (The), Glasgow 617 ..
Steel Nut (fe Tube Co. (The) Openshaw, near Manchester 515 ..
Steiner, F. & Co., Church, Lancashire 53 ..
Stephenson, Henry G., Manchester 282 ..
Sterne, L & Co., Limited, Glasgow 605 ..
Stevens, Thomas, Coventry 370 ..
Stevens, Thomas, Coventry 328 ..
Stevens Williams, near Stourbridge 200 ..
Steward, Jas. Hy., London
Stewart, Andrew and James, Limited, Glasgow 566 .,
Stiff & Co., Bristol 915 .,
Stirling, William tk Sons, Glasgow’ 173 .,
Storey, Brothers & Co., Lancaster 223 .
Storey, Isaac, ck Sons, Manchester 645 .
Stott, James ik Co, Manchester 618 .
Stott, James <k Co., Manchester 144 .
Stott, Joseph, Oldham 412 a.
Stubbs, Joseph, Manchester 394 .
Sutcliffe, H. (k Co., Manchester 108 .
Sutcliffe, S. B. tk Co., Manchester 142 .
Symond«, Harry, Portsmouth
Sw’ailes, John & Sons, Oldham 536 .
Sw’ailes, John tk Sons, Oldham 616 a.
Swan and Leach, Manchester 730 .
Swainson, Birley <k Co., Preston 23 .
Swift James, <k Son, London ^
T
Tangyes, Limited, Birmingham and Manchester 413 .
Tate, Henry tk Sons, Liverpool 913 a .
Tatham, John, Iron Works, Rochdale 363 .
Tatliam, William, Rochdale 386 .
Taylor, William tk Co., London 764 .
Taylor, James tk Sons, Bury, Lancashire 878 .
Taylor, Garnett <k Co., Manchester 456 .
Taylor, Lang tk Co., Limited, Stalybridge 491 .
Taylor, Thomas and John, Oldham and Manchester 587 .
TNDEX— GENERAL EXHIBITS.
Teggin, William, Manchester
Tennants & Co., Manchester
The Committee of the Boys’ and Girls’ Refuges and Homes,
Manchester
The Manx Line, the Isle of Man, Liverpool, and ^lanchester
Steamship Co., Limited, Liverpool, and Douglas, Isle of
Man
Tlie Waterbury Watch Co., Limited, London
Thew and Stiebel, Manchester
Thom, John, Chorley
Thom, David & Co., Pendleton, Manchester
Thomas, Peter, Manchester
Thomas, George & Co., Manchester
Tliomas, George & Co., Manchester
Thomas, Thos., Cardiff
Thomasson, J. L., Worcester
Thompson, W. J., Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada
Thompson, Thomas C., Manchester
Thonet Brothers. Vienna
Thornliebank Co., Limited (The), Manchester
Thornton, A. G., ^Manchester
Thornton, J. E., Moss Side, Manchester
Threlfall, Richard, Bolton ‘
Thurstonland Brick and Stone Co., Limited, Brockholes, near
Huddersfield
Thwaites Brothers, Limited, Bradford, Yorkshire
Tilley, Arthur & Co., London
Titancrete Co., Manchester
Titanic Steel Co., Manchester
Tolley, Harry, Nottingham
Tomson, A. S., Coventry
Tonge, H. Dacre, Croston Towers, Alderley Edge, Cheshire...
Tonge, John, Styal, Handforth, near Manchester
Tootal, Broadhurst, Lee Co., Manchester
Tooth & Co., Woodville, near Burton-on-Trent
Torrance, W. H., Edinburgh
Towle, A. P. & Son, Manchester
Trenchmann, Otto, West Hartlepool
Trotman, Howard, London, N.W.
411
STAND
PAGE
476
... 119
00
?— 1
00
... 180
1125
... 214
194
... 68
1109
... 212
911
... 192
821
... 180
841
... 183
784
... 175
11
... 44
580
... 138
462
... 115
104
... 56
1113
212
486
... 121
233
... 76
43
... 48
1101
... 211
... 206
490
... 123
893
... 189
666
... 154
244
... 77
212
... 70
612
... 144
... 207
328
... 86
... 207
*.. 207
38
... 48
279
.. 82
480
... 120
924
... 194
899
... 190
1130
... 214
- — i
INDEX— GENERAL EXHIBITS.
Troutbeck Park (Westmorland) Green Slate Co., Limited
(The), Windermere
Trustees of the late James Buckley, Manchester
Tucker, Henry &, Co.. Rochdale and Manchester
Tull is, John & Son, Bridgeton, Glasgow
Turk, Richard John, Kingston-on-Thames
Turner A Co.. Manchester
Turner, M. A. & Co., Sunbury-on-Thames
Turner, "William, Salford
Turner Brothers, Spotland, Rochdale .'....
u
Unbreakable Pulley Co. (The), Manchester
Union Engineering Co., Manchester
V
Yeitch AYilson, J., Halliday & Co., Bradford, Manchester
Yessiere Aine, Baccarat, France
w
Y"addington and Ramsbottom, Manchester
AVade, Joseph Armytage, Hornsea, near Hull ...
AVahliss, Ernest, Yienna, Austria
Walker and Hall, Sheffield
^Yalker, Samuel, Radcliffe, near Manchester
Walmsley, Charles, Bury
Walker, William & Sons, Bolton
Mmiwork, Henry & Co., Manchester
^Yillaii and Mills, Blackburn
^Yalker Brothers, "Wigan
AYalmsley, Charles, Bury
AValton, James & Sons, Denton, near Manchester
"Ward, Anthony & Co., Leek
"Wardle, Joshua & Sons, Leek
AVardlc, Thomas, Leek
AVardle, Thomas, Leek
Yhmlle, Thomas, Leek
STAND
PAGE
905 ...
191
804 ...
182
321 ...
85
561 ...
133
207 ...
70
236 ...
76
1103 ...
211
419 ...
105
559 ...
133
608 ...
144
415 ...
104
866 ...
185
1117 ...
213
539 ...
130
450 ...
113
260 ...
79
28 ...
46
444 ...
112
590 ...
140
874 ...
186
352 ...
91
369 ...
95
421 ...
lOf)
430 ...
107
375 ...
96
206 ...
70
333 ...
86
334 ...
87
335 ...
87
312 .,.
84
h.
f
STAND
Wartl, Edward, F.R.M.S., Manchester 708 .
"Warwick, James, Chorl ton-on- Medlock 364a.
Waterhouse, Joseph, Bowdon, Cheshire 40 .
"Watson, "William &. Co., Manchester 46 .
"Watson, John, Manchester 116 .
AVatson, Robert & Co., Siirdah, Lower Bengal 310 .
AVaters, J. and E. & Co., Manchester 770 .
AAhitson, Edward, Edinburgh 889 .
AVatson tfe Sons, N., London
AVatts, AVilliam, & Son, Manchester
AA^aterside Iron AA^orks Co., Dukinfield, Cheshire 377 .
AVatson, Laidlaw & Co., Kingston, Glasgow 400 .
AVatkinson, Robert, Salford 578 .
AAhiterlow & Sons, Limited, London
AA'"eatherley, Bros., Bolton
AVeber, Ch. & Co., Thann, Alsace 778 .
AA^ebster’s Patent Aluminium Crown Metal Co., London 807 .
AA’^ebb, Joseph & Co., Bury 625 .
Webb, Francis AVilliam, Crewe 633 .
AA^ebb, Francis AVilliam, Crewe 638 .
AA^ebb, Francis AVilliam, Crewe 639
AA^el don’s Chlorine Processes Co., Limited, AA^estminster 714 .
AA'ellington, J. B. B., London '
Wells, A. C., Manchester 661
AVenham Co., Limited (The), London 137
AVest Cumberland Iron and Steel Co., Limited, AVorkington... 811 .
AVest, G., & Son, Southsea, Hants
AA'estray, Copeland A Co., Barrow-in-Furness 510a.
AA'hitty, Henry, Liverpool 149
AAliite, John A Co., Edinburgh 165
AVliite, AV. B., Colne, Lancashire 468a.
AVhiteley, John A Sons, Halifax, Yorkshire 542
AA^hiting, Matthew, London
AA hitworth, Sir Joseph A Co., Limited, Openshaw, Manchester 381 .
AA’^hitecross Co., Limited (The), AVarrington 565
AA^idnes Alkali Co., Limited (The), AVidncs 830
AVugg Brothers A Steele, Runcorn 817
AViggin, Henry A Co., Birmingham 810
A\ ilson, AVilliam A Co., Manchester I 39
PAGE
. 163
4l4
INDiiX— GENERAL EXHIBITS.
Wilson, Charles tfe Sons, Leeds
Wilson, John, Jnn., Manchester
■\Vild, P it Co., Congleton
AVilcock it Co., Leeds
'Wilkinson, "W. N. it Co., Manchester
M’ilkinson, M'illiam Needham it Co., Manchester
AVilliams, John PL ct Co., Manchester
'Willesden Paper AVorks AVillesden Junction, London
AVill iams, E. Leader, The Oaks, Altrincham
AVilson and Ingham, Liversedge, Yorkshire
AAalson <t Co., Barnsley
AATlson Brothers, Todmorden
Wilkes, John, Mapplebeck it Co., Birmingham
AVilson, AVilliam it Co., Alanchester
AVilkinson, Jas. and Aaron
AVilde, James it Son, Oldham
AVindover, John«Charles, Alanchester
AATnser it Co., Alanchester
AA^ollaston, Edwin AVashington, Manchester
AA^'olff, Pleyelf & Co., Paris
AA^olters, Otto, London
Wolstenholme, John, Badcliffe, near Manchester
AA’’oollams, AA^illiam it Co., London
AA^oolley, James, Sons it Co., Manchester
AVoolley, James, Sons & Co., Alanchester
AVoolley, James, Sons it Co., Manchester
AA^oodcock, F., Douglas, Isle of Man
AA^ood, John and Edward, Bolton
AVood, Diinderdale it Co., Alanchester
AA^oodrow it Sons, Stockport
AVoods, Hamilton it Co., Salford
AVood, Edward, Alanchester
AVorcester Royal Porcelain Co., Limited (The), AA^orcester.
AVorcester Royal Porcelain Co., Limited (The), AVorcester.
Worthington Pumping Engine Co., London
AA'orrall, James and John AI., Salford
AA^rexham Lager Beer Co., Limited (The), Alanchester ....
AAYigley, James it Son, Bur}’, Lancashire
STAND
PAGE
U3 ...
61
148 ...
, 62
324 ...
85
917 ...
193
350b...
91
934 ...
195
775 ...
170
908 ...
191
208
495 ...
124
529 ...
129
543 ...
131
550 ...
131
680 ...
156
461b...
116
534 ...
130
84 ...
53
728 ...
166
867 ...
185
270 ...
80
711 ...
163
517 ...
128
51 ...
49
722a...
165
725 ...
165
785 ...
173
. . .
208
1105 ...
211
398 ...
101
409 ...
103
431 ...
107
581 ...
138
586 ...
139
259 ...
79
189 ...
7
526 ...
129
185 ...
66
916 ...
192
67 ...
51
IRISH SECTION.
STAND
PAGE
Allniciii «k Co., Bandoii, Cork
1275 ...
239
Anderson, D. & Son, Limited, Belfast
1264 ...
238
Athlone Woollen Mills Co., Athlone, Ireland
1161 ...
220
Barbour, William & Sons, Limited, Ireland
1178 ...
225
Belfast Electric Appliances Co., Limited, Belfast
1211 ...
230
Belfast Ropework Co,, (The), Limited, Belfast
1189 ...
227
Belleek Pottery Co., Limited, (The), Co. Fermanagh
1255 ...
236
Belfast Hemstitching Co
1190 ...
227
Bendiiff and Froe Slate Co., Limited, Co. Cork, Ireland
1207 ...
229
Bessbrook Granite Co., Limited, Bessbrook, Ireland
1221 ...
231
Bcwlev, Webb, & Co., Dublin
1240 ...
234
Bewley and Draper, Limited, Dublin
1281 ...
239
Booth and Fox, Cork
1166 ...
221
Box, William R. & Co., Dublin
1260 ...
237
Brookfield Linen Co., Limited, Belfast
1155 ...
219
Brown, John S. & Sons, Belfast and New York
1151 ...
219
Brunton, Andrew Cameron, Mountmellick, Queen’s Co
1253 ...
236
Byrne, Matthew, Dublin *.
1232 ...
233
Bushmills Old Distillery Co., Limited Bii.^hmills, Co. Antrim
1276 ...
239
Cannon, Cormick, Donegal, Ireland
1157 ...
220
(Campbell, Hugh & Son, Newry, Ireland
1223 ...
232
Cantrell and Cochrane, Dublin
1277 ...
239
Carmichael-Ferrall, J., Augher, Co. Tyrone
1305 ...
241
Carson, Walter & Sons, Dublin
1215 ...
230
Chancellor & Son, Dublin
1226 ...
232
Chancellor, John, Dublin
1322 ...
243
Cherry and Smallbridge, Dublin
1293 ...
241
Clanchy, T. J. & Co., Cork
1311 ...
242
Clayton, F. and L, Co. Meath
1191 ...
227
Coghlan, T., Dublin
1247 ...
235
Caledon Woollen Co., Caledon 1176,
, 1177 ...
225
Convoy Woollen Co. (The), Co. Donegal
1159 ...
220
1 County Down Flax Spinning and Weaving Co., Limited, Co. I
Down
1162 ...
1279 ...
220
239
Crawford, Alex. & Son, Belfast
;
EsojaniP'F--^ .
' r
s
STAND
Creameries Association of Ireland, Dublin 1315 .
Creedon, James F., Cork 1302 .,
Curtis, W. A Sons, Dublin 1196 .
Davis, Benjamin, Dublin 1251 .
Deans, Hadden A Co. Belfast 1291 .
Devereaux, Nicholas A Co., Wexford 1287 .
Dillon, James, C.E., M.I.C.E., Stratford, Glengeaiy, Co., Dublin 1252 .
Doyle J. & Sons, Dublin 1238 .
Drogheda Chemical Manure Co. (The), Drogheda 1285 .
Dublin Prepared Peat Litter Co., Dublin 1225
Dublin United Tramway Co. (The), Dublin 1222 .
Dwyer A Co., Limited, Cork 1163 .
Edmundson, J. A Co., Limited, Westminster 1242 .
Edmundson, J. A Co., Limited, Dublin, and Westminister ... 1198 .
Eglinton Chemical Co., Limited (The), Glasgow 1208 .
Elliott, Michael, Bridge End, Mallow, Co. Cork 1195 .
Elliott, "William Henry, Thurles, Co. Tipperary 1194 .
Finhiy, Alexander, Belfast 1290 .
FitzGerald, Geo. Fras. M.A., F.R.S., F.T.C.D., Dublin 1219 .
Forrest & Sons, Dublin, and Cork 1187 .
Frankland-street Collar Co., Limited, Belfast 1184 .
Glen Distillery Co., Limited (The), Cork 1269 ..
Glover, M., Dublin 1316 .
Goodbody, T. P. R, Dublin 1271 .,
Goodbody, J. and L. F., Clara, King’s Co. Ireland 1156 .
Goulding, W. A H. M., Dublin; and Glen, Cork 1303 .
Graham, MTlliam, Dublin 1170 .
Great SoutheriiA Western Railway Co., Inchicore, Dublin... 1209, 1212 .
Greer, Samuel R. A Co., Co. Down 1165 .
Grendon, Thomas A Co., Drogheda 1216 .
Gnibb, Howard, F.R.S., Rathmines, Dublin 1234 .
Gird wood Patent Asthma Remedy 1273 .
Great Southern and AVestern Railway Co., (The), Dublin 1193 .
Harris, Daniel A Son, Dublin 1236 .
Harrison, Charles AVilliam, Dublin 1204 .
Harrington Brothers, Cork ' 1283 .
Hartland, Richard, Cork 1284 .
Hayes, Frederick William A Co., Bambridgc, Ireland 1153 .
Hegarty, William A Sons, Cork 1262 .
PAGE
.. 242
.. 241
.. 228
.. 236
.. 240
.. 240
.. 236
.. 234
.. 240
.. 232
.. 231
.. 220
.. 235
.. 228
.. 230
.. 228
.. 228
.. 240
.. 231
.. 226
.. 226
238
.. 242
.. 238
.. 219
.. 241
.. 225
.. 230
.. 220
.. 230
.. 233
.. 238
.. 227
.. 234
.. 229
.. 239
.. 240
.. 219
.. 237
INDEX— IRISH SECTION. 417
8TAND PAGE
Hill, Charles James, Waterfoi'd 1308 ... 242
Hill & Sons Co. Dublin 1160 ... 220
Holden, Francis, Dublin 1251 ... 230
Hutton, John & Sons, Dublin 1246 ... 235
Hynes, AVilliam John, Dublin 1201 ... 22'J
Irish Lace Depot, Dublin 1186 ... 226
Irish Section Committee, Dublin 1200 ... 220
island Spinning Co., (The), Limited, Lisburn, Ireland 1183 ... 226
Jameson, Pirn, tt Co., Dublin 1266 ... 238
Jennings, Thomas, Cork 1288, 1289, and 1295 ... 240
Jury, J. W., Belfast 1278 ... 239
Keane, R. & F., Co. Waterford 1265 ... 238
Keane, Edward J., Dublin 1251 ... 235
Kelly, Dunne, A: Co., Limited, Dublin 1301 ... 241
King, Fredk. A: Co., Limited, Belfast and London 1309 ... 242
Knaggs Brotlmis, Dublin 1259 ... 2->7
Knitting Factory, (The), Tipperary r.... 1172 .. 225
Lafayette, J., Dublin 1320 ... 213
Laird, E., Dublin 1263 ... 237
Lane, Denny, Glamnire, Co. Cork 1294 ... 211
Lawrence, William, Dublin 1318 ... 243
Lawrence, William, Dublin .' 1317 ... 243
Lawson’s Patent Adhesive Capsule Co., Dublin 1248 ... 235
Lewis Fred. Ai Co., Limited, Dublin 1292 ... 240
Mackie, Janies Aj Son, Belfast 1220 ... 231
Alacrory, Samuel Martin, Limavady, Co. Londonderry 1306 ... 242
Alaguire A: Son, Dublin 1241 ... 231
Mahony, Martin and Bros., Limited, Cork 1177 ... 225
Marsh Ac Co., Limited, Belfast 1298 ... 241
Mattersou, J. Ac Sons, Limerick 1310 ... 242
Matthews, Samuel, Dublin 1256 ... 236
Maybuiy, Charles John, Kenmai-e 1158 ... 220
Mayo Granite Co. (The), Co. Mayo, and Manchester 1199 ... 229
McCartliy, J. A: Sons, Cork , 1274 ... 239
McCausland, Samuel, Belfast 1299 ... 241
McDonnel, John Ac Co., Limited, Dublin 1261 ... 237
McMaster, Hodgson, Ac Co., Dublin 1286 ... 240
Millar, A. Ac Co., Dublin 1313 ... 242
Miller, Daniel Ac Co., Dublin 1210 ... 230
418
Miller John & Son, Galway
Molynenx and Ferguson, Belfast
Murray, Sir James <fe Son, Dublin
Murphy, Isaac J., Armagh, Ireland
Murphy and Orr, Belfast
Murphy John, Dublin
Musgrave and Co., Limited, Belfi\st, London, and Paris
Nolan, Kate, Cork
O’Reilly, Dunne A Co., Dublin
O’Reilly, Dunne A C<x, Dublin
O’Sullivan, C. A J., Coik
O’Sullivan, C. & J., Cork
Pearson, Thos. A Co., Dublin
Phillipson H. E., Dublin
Pierce, Philip A Co., M exford, Ireland
Pirn Brothers ct Co., Dublin, and London
Pirn Bros., Limited, Dublin
Pirn Brothers, Limited, Dublin
Pirn Brothers, Limited, Dubiin
Plunkett, John & Co., Dublin
Plunkett Brothers, Dublin
Power John A Son, Dublin
Power, John ik Son, Dublin
Power, J. Jr Co., Dublin
Power, Michael, Dublin
Rainey, Hugh, Jun., Ballymena, Co. Antrim
Rathborne, John G., Dublin
Richardson, J. N., Sons, and Owden, Limited, North Belfast...
Rogers, John, Belfast
Ross and Walpole, Dublin 12
Ross, W. A. d: Co., Belfast 7
Russ, Percy H. Culleenamore, Co. Sligo
Schumann, Fritz, Dublin
Semple, James C., Dublin
Shaw, J. W. dr Sons, Limited, Limerick
Shepherd, Simpson, Drumcondra, Dublin
Sibthoi-pe, H. & Son, Dublin
Simonton, John, Comber, Co. Down
Smith, William, Dublin
O
INDEX -TIUSH SEOTION
STAXD
1152
Smythe & Co , Balbriggan and London
Spence William, Dublin
Sweetman Sz Co., Dublin
Taylor, Robert A., Coleraine
Tillie and Henderson, London, E.C
Traill, William A,, C.E., Portrush, Co. Antiim
Ulster Linen Tmde Exhibit, Belfast, Ireland
Usher, Robert & Co., Drogheda
Victoria Slate Co., Limited, Carrick-on-Suir and Dublin
Wallace, John Orr, Belfixst
Waterford, Marquis of, Co. Waterford
Watson, Benjamin, Cork
Werner A Son, Dublin
Wightman, David, Belfast
Wilson, S. & Co., Belfast, Ireland
Wilson Brothers, Athlone
Wilson, Abraham and Armagh Spinning Co., Newry....
Wolfliill Flax Spinning Co., Limited, Belfast
Women’s Industries
Wood, AValter, London
Yeates it Son, Dublin
1 .
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